Derbyshire Maps

( Page 2 of 4 )
£140 Robert Butters 1803 Robert Butters Robert Butters Ref: 6043.12
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Size guide - reference image
9x13 cm
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DERBYSHIRE.
The engraver or engravers of this series of maps are unknown and the maps are referenced by the first publisher, Robert Butters, a Fleet Street printer, who issued them in 
An Atlas of England... in 1803. They are also known as the "upside-down series", the England map and many of the county maps being engraved with North to the bottom of the page. In fact, the county maps are variously orientated with North to the top, left, right or bottom of the page. The work was possibly intended for school use and the odd orientation of the maps may have been done to stimulate young minds. This represented Robert Butters' only serious venture into cartography but unlike the huge success of John Cary's publication The Traveller's Companion, on which these maps were based, Butter's publication was limited to this single issue. John Hatchard acquired the plates later the same year issuing them in a two-volume work The Picture of England 1803, and 1804. The publications were small and examples are rare.
From the first edition of 1803 from Butters' Atlas of England . . .  In the true tradition of 'the upside-down series', Derbyshire is orientated with North to the bottom of the page. 
Some occasional marking and a printers thumbprint over Mansfield but a good example in original hand colour of a rare map.

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