REFINE
Browse All : World Atlas of Georgia and Florida
1-12 of 12
Author
Cassini, Gio. Ma. (Giovanni Maria), 1745-approximately 1824
Note
Relief shown pictorially. Includes decorative title cartouche and bar scales. In Volume III.
Author
[Mercator, Gerhard, 1512-1594, Hondius, Jodocus, 1563-1612]
Author
Meyer, Joseph, 1796-1856
Note
Engraved outline hand color map. Shows administrative boundaries, cities and towns. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridians are Greenwich and Washington.
Author
Zatta, Antonio, active 1757-1797
Note
Engraved hand-colored in outline, double-page map. The first edition of Zatta's twelve sheet version of Mitchell's Map of North America, plus three other maps: Il Canada, La Baja D' Hudson, and Le Isole di Terra Nuova e Capo Breton. Zatta's version of Mitchell is not an exact copy: many geographical changes are introduced, and Bermuda is depicted as well as Jamaica, neither of which are shown by Mitchell. Maps showing administrative divisions, settlements, cities, towns, forts, Indian settlements, bridges, canals, mountains and rivers. Relief shown pictorially and by hacures. Includes notations.
Author
Seutter, Matthaeus, 1678-1756
Note
Composite of Plan von Neu Ebenezer and the adjoining (Coasts of South Carolina, Georgia, Florida. Savannah mills). Ruderman: "Important early town plan of New Ebenezer on the Savannah River, accompanied by a large map of the region from Charleston and Augusta, GA in the north to Saint Augustine, Florida, with a smaller inset map of St. Simons River, and Great St. Simon's Island and Jekyl Isle. The map was prepared for Samuel Urlsperger's Ausfürhliche Nachrichten von den saltzburgischen emigranten, published by Matthaeus Seutter, 1747. The map illustrates one of the most interesting early colonies in the southeast. The Salzburgers were a group of Lutherans who were exiled from their homeland in Salzburg, Austria. In 1734, the English Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge sponsored the sea passage of a small group of them to America. Their first settlement, on the Ebenezer River, proved inhospitable, so in 1736 they moved to the banks of the Savannah River, where they founded New Ebenezer. With Savannah, founded only three years earlier, as a model, New Ebenezer was laid out on a grid pattern, punctuated by open squares and became a thriving locale known for its silk trade. It is now an archaeological site listed on the National Register of Historic Places; only the brick Jerusalem Lutheran Church and a few other buildings survive."
Author
Seutter, Matthaeus, 1678-1756
Note
This map is part of the following map, Plan von Neu Ebenezer. Ruderman: "Important early town plan of New Ebenezer on the Savannah River, accompanied by a large map of the region from Charleston and Augusta, GA in the north to Saint Augustine, Florida, with a smaller inset map of St. Simons River, and Great St. Simon's Island and Jekyl Isle. The map was prepared for Samuel Urlsperger's Ausfürhliche Nachrichten von den saltzburgischen emigranten, published by Matthaeus Seutter, 1747. The map illustrates one of the most interesting early colonies in the southeast. The Salzburgers were a group of Lutherans who were exiled from their homeland in Salzburg, Austria. In 1734, the English Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge sponsored the sea passage of a small group of them to America. Their first settlement, on the Ebenezer River, proved inhospitable, so in 1736 they moved to the banks of the Savannah River, where they founded New Ebenezer. With Savannah, founded only three years earlier, as a model, New Ebenezer was laid out on a grid pattern, punctuated by open squares and became a thriving locale known for its silk trade. It is now an archaeological site listed on the National Register of Historic Places; only the brick Jerusalem Lutheran Church and a few other buildings survive."
Author
Cram, George Franklin
Note
Prime meridians Greenwich and Washington.
Author
[Jones, C.H., Hamilton, T.H., Williams, J.David]
Note
Relief shown in hachures.
Author
USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics).
1-12 of 12
|