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Browse All : Chart Atlas and Chart Map of Scotland and England

1-5 of 5
Pl. 5. Pt. I. A new chart of England, Scotland and Ireland
Mount, John; Page, Thom...
Pl. 5. Pt. I. A new cha...
1752
Chart Atlas
 
Author
[Mount, John, Page, Thomas, 1704-1762, Mount and Page]
Note
Engraved double page navigation chart. Depths shown by soundings. Showing the course of the principal tracts from place to place. Includes Compass rose, Title cartuche and coat of arms. "A Scale of English & French Leagues".
A new chart of the East Coast of England and Scotland
Imray, James; Hewett; S...
A new chart of the East...
1852
Chart Atlas
 
Author
[Imray, James, Hewett, Slater]
Note
Navigation chart of the East Coast of England and Scotland with 5 insets, 4 profile views, and notes. Showing all the harbors, rivers, bays, roads, rocks, sands, buoys, beacons, sea-marks, depths of water, latitude, bearings and the course of the principal tracts and their distances from place to place in English miles. Includes notes, describing the setting and flowing of the tides; with directions for the knowing of any place, and how to harbor a ship. Depths shown by soundings. "Price 5s."
Pas-Caart vant Canaal.
Goos, Pieter, 1616-1675
Pas-Caart vant Canaal.
1665
Chart Atlas
 
Author
Goos, Pieter, 1616-1675
Note
North to the right.
Carte Reduite des Isles Britanniques Second Feuille Partie Septentrionale de l'Angleterre.
Bellin, Jacques Nicolas...
Carte Reduite des Isles...
1765
Chart Atlas
 
Author
Bellin, Jacques Nicolas, 1703-1772
Note
From J.F. Letenneur: "Exceptional onboard document of this rare and fabulous maritime atlas, a masterpiece by the greatest French hydrographer of the 18th century, with maps of all the coastlines known at the time. Bound with the coat of arms of the King of France, the atlas was taken by the English aboard the frigate la Nymphe, off the coasts of Ushant August 10, 1780, during one of the naval battles of the American War of Independence which took place on European waters. In the context of the war at the end of the 18th century, and of the rivalry between the French and British Navy, maritime atlases, were strategic tools, and this “Hydrographie Françoise” more so than any other, because its purpose was to provide the best maritime charts for the French ships that were fighting on the American side against the British. (The handwritten captions throughout most of the atlas are prices for individual maps and all include the same mention: “for sailors”). These atlases were not the kind to be kept in a library, but precious tools, based on the observations of the travelers and continuously improved upon, as reflect in the present copy. It was bound with the engraved title page of the edition of 1737-1765, but the index includes maps printed after 1765 (until 1772), and the copy was augmented by six maps that do not appear in the index (until 1776), as well as 14 pages of text from the Versailles edition of 1773. The later maps are signed by Verdun de la Crenne and were done during the campaigns of the Flore (1771-1772) and of the Isis led by Fleurieu in 1768-1769. The captions explain that the maps were created using the latest technology of the day that could measure longitude (maritime clocks)." (Continued in the Pub Note field).
Carte Reduite des Isles Britanniques.
Bellin, Jacques Nicolas...
Carte Reduite des Isles...
1757
Chart Atlas
 
Author
Bellin, Jacques Nicolas, 1703-1772
Note
From J.F. Letenneur: "Exceptional onboard document of this rare and fabulous maritime atlas, a masterpiece by the greatest French hydrographer of the 18th century, with maps of all the coastlines known at the time. Bound with the coat of arms of the King of France, the atlas was taken by the English aboard the frigate la Nymphe, off the coasts of Ushant August 10, 1780, during one of the naval battles of the American War of Independence which took place on European waters. In the context of the war at the end of the 18th century, and of the rivalry between the French and British Navy, maritime atlases, were strategic tools, and this “Hydrographie Françoise” more so than any other, because its purpose was to provide the best maritime charts for the French ships that were fighting on the American side against the British. (The handwritten captions throughout most of the atlas are prices for individual maps and all include the same mention: “for sailors”). These atlases were not the kind to be kept in a library, but precious tools, based on the observations of the travelers and continuously improved upon, as reflect in the present copy. It was bound with the engraved title page of the edition of 1737-1765, but the index includes maps printed after 1765 (until 1772), and the copy was augmented by six maps that do not appear in the index (until 1776), as well as 14 pages of text from the Versailles edition of 1773. The later maps are signed by Verdun de la Crenne and were done during the campaigns of the Flore (1771-1772) and of the Isis led by Fleurieu in 1768-1769. The captions explain that the maps were created using the latest technology of the day that could measure longitude (maritime clocks)." (Continued in the Pub Note field).
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