Creator Name-CRT
John Downman
Title
Alicia Hughes
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Creator Name-CRT
Pierre-Paul Prud'hon
Title
Amours de Phrosine et Mélidore
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Creator Name-CRT
Thomas Rowlandson
Title
Glorious Defeat of the Dutch Navy
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Creator Name-CRT
Louis Gauffier
Title
View of Falls at Vallombrosa
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Creator Name-CRT
Thomas Rowlandson
Title
A Theatrical Candidate
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Creator Name-CRT
Jacob Cats
Title
Winter Night in a Dutch Town
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Creator Name-CRT
John Shaw
Title
Desk
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Creator Name-CRT
Artist not recorded
Title
Map sampler
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Creator Name-CRT
Lydia Tyler
Title
Sampler
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Creator Name-CRT
Gillray, James
Title
The Marriage of Cupid and Psyche
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Creator Name-CRT
Philippe Abraham Peticolas
Title
Mary Briscoe Baldwin
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Creator Name-CRT
François Baillairgé
Title
The Virgin
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
National Gallery of Canada
Creator Name-CRT
François Baillairgé
Title
Saint John
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
National Gallery of Canada
Creator Name-CRT
Pierre-Henri de Valenciennes
Title
The Idalian Woods with Cephisa and Cupid
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
National Gallery of Canada
Creator Name-CRT
artist unknown
Title
Library and Rock Garden
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Creator Name-CRT
Utagawa Toyokuni
Title
Sawamura Sojuro III as Uma No Samurai
Creation Date
1797
AMICA Contributor
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Author
Okada, Gyokuzan, 1737-1812.
Publisher
Naniwa : Harimaya Kyube
Note
Title from: Kohan Osaka chizu kaisetsu / Sako Keizo, p. 67. Wood block print. In Japanese. Oriented with north to the left. Main temples and shrines shown pictorially. Engraved by Kobayashi Heihachi. Includes text and grids. Shows products in Osaka. On verso: Kawa ezu.
Author
Okada, Gyokuzan, 1737-1812.
Publisher
Naniwa : Harimaya Kyube
Note
Title from: Kohan Osaka chizu kaisetsu / Sako Keizo, p. 67. Wood block print. In Japanese. Oriented with north to the left. Main temples and shrines shown pictorially. Engraved by Kobayashi Heihachi. Includes text and grids. Shows products in Osaka. On verso: Kawa ezu.
Author
Kindermann, Joseph Karl, 1744-1808
Note
Atlas of Inner Austria published for the first time between 1789 and 1797 by Franz Xaver Miller in Granz, consists of 12 map series, including the index sheet. From the Collection of General Nicholas Charles Oudinot. It is a loose collection without title page, only the dedication copy of Emperor Franz II includes hand-written title page "Atlas von Inner Osterreich" and provides information about the publisher Franz Xaver Miller. Map are drawn by Joseph Karl Klindermann, and engraved Christoph Junker in Vienna. Maps are dissected into sections 17.5x12, backed with linen, folded in a marbled paper covered slipcase,18x13, with pasted down label reads" Carte v. Inner Osterreich" in gilt on red morocco. Maps showing provinces, major cities, towns, villages, landmarks, rivers and mountains. Maps includes text, list of places, legend and statistical tables. Relief shown by hachures. General Nicolas Charles Oudinot,1st Comte Oudinot, 1st Duc de Reggio (1767 - 1848), and a Marshal of France. A fierce fighter, the man was wounded no less than 34 times during his military career. After Napoleon’s fall, Oudinot joined the Bourbon Restoration and stayed loyal to the King even after Napoleon’s return in 1815. For his loyalty and service, he was named a peer of the realm. He served until 1823, when he participated in the French invasion of Spain. Then, he turned again to political and administrative appointments; he died while serving as governor of Les Invalides, at the veterans’ hospital in Paris. Franz Xaver Miller was well connected in official circles, which gave Kindermann access to source of information for the preparation of the maps. The quality of the atlas is confirmed by and encounter between Kindermann and Napoleon Bonaparte, whose maps has dramatically aided Napoleon in his Austrian campaign. Kindermann was summond to Vienna in 1801 to serve as chief editor for the "Atlas of the Austrian Empire" Austrian National atlas, 1805.
Author
Kindermann, Joseph Karl, 1744-1808
Note
Uncolored map of the Gotitz, Poland. Includes overview text of the covered areas, tables, distances and legend. Relief shown by hachures.
Author
Kindermann, Joseph Karl, 1744-1808
Note
Uncolored map of the Oberkrain or the Laybacher circle. Includes overview text of the covered areas, tables, distances and legend. Relief shown by hachures.
Author
Imlay, Gilbert
Note
Uncolored map of the state showing rivers (with their widths), mountains, Indian boundaries, and towns.
Author
Imlay, Gilbert
Note
Uncolored map with detailed information about the state including county lines, rivers, mountains, roads, rapids on the river, and geography of the land.
Author
Imlay, Gilbert
Note
Uncolored highly detailed map of the Ohio River rapids with Clarkville on one side of the river and Louisville on the other. Houses, gardens, crop fields, a fort, roads and the rapids are shown.
Author
Imlay, Gilbert
Note
Territories shown in outline color. Map stretches from the top of the Great Lakes to southern Georgia. Battles, settlements, and forts are noted.
Author
Imlay, Gilbert
Note
Clark II-41. Third and best edition. Streeter: "The most complete version of this work, in which form it was the most informative compilation on the West at the end of the 18th century." Complete text of Filson's Kentucky, Hutchins on Florida, etc., and much else. The Map of the State of Kentucky, by Elihu Barker is a slight reduction in size from the original by Carey, but not as great a reduction as the edition of the map that appeared in Carey's American Atlas and General Atlas in 1795 (cf Wheat & Brun 641, 642). The London version of the Barker map seems to have the same information as the Philadelphia, but they are very different in engraving style with the Philadelphia copy having an "American" look. Clark is critical of the accuracy of Imlay's letters, which were probably written in Europe after he fled Kentucky and financial problems. See DAB for another critical view of Mr. Imlay.
Author
Andrews, John, 1736-1809
Note
Circular, hand colored in outline, map, 49x49 on sheet 54x71, with Britain at the center, published by John Andrews in London. At upper margin "Plate VI", Part of John Andrews' Historical Atlas of England, which was issued sheet by sheet over nearly the entire decade of the 1790,s. Shows country boundaries, main settlements, volcanoes, coastal features, and seafarers routes. Meridian of St. Paul's Cathedral, London. Walter Goffart: Copperplate circular detailed map of Western Hemisphere, hand color in outline, based on the latest edition of Arrowsmith's World Map in Globular Projection, designed by D. F. Sotzmann. Includes index and abbreviations. Relief shown by hachures. Walter Goffart: Copperplate circular detailed map of Western Hemisphere, hand color in outline, based on the latest edition of Arrowsmith's World Map in Globular Projection, designed by D. F. Sotzmann. Includes index and abbreviations. Relief shown by hachures. Walter Goffart: "Andrews's atlas is the oddest and in some sense the least historical work we have encountered, yet not so strange as to be disregarded. The Weimar journal Allgemeine geographische Ephemeriden greeted the early sheets with praise and enthusiasm, even though the maps espoused Philippe Buache's notions of physical geography, with which the viewer disagreed. Later issues out of Weimar record growing disillusionment, motivated by the slow pace of publication and particularly the map of the English Fisheries and spas. The reviewer was still waiting for history.. . . Andrews had an eclectic conception of the past. . . . Continental historical atlases had no influence on him. He unwittingly foreshadowed a distant future of dominant thematic maps and appears to subscribe to an histoire (presque) totale, extending from the physical formation of England to its modern deaneries and healing waters, not foretting the Saxon and Norman invasions. Andrews is most original, even eccentric, in a map that contains historical informaion, yet is well designed to disconcert readers of history. Polar projections are familiar for certain kinds of information and had long been drawn. The same does not hold for a projection in which London takes the place of a pole: "Political, Historical, Astronomical and Commercial, Chart of Europe. To Shew relatively the Situation of Places by the Rays of the Sun, the Rumb of the Wind and the hours of the Day, from the Meridian to the Parallel of London, on which are delineated the Zones and Climes with the tracks of the Carthaginians, Phoenicians, Romans, Saxons, Danes & Swedes, with rectiline distance in circles of 100 miles each." The map, an exceptionally large foldout, radiiates out of London; it reached the North Pole and the Sahara and includes part of Greece and the Black Sea, as well as Scandinavia and Iceland. Much navigational information is recorded, and many localities are noted, including negligible ones in Iceland. The various tracks -- discrete, labeld lines -- are Andrews's bow to conventional historical events. The lines trace the more or less permanent visitors to Britain, some as tin merchants, others as raiders and settlers; Saxons are distinguished from Anglo-Saxons. The unannounced, least expected track is of Stuart Pretender, both coming and going in 1745. Much is fitted into this large map. Andrews outdid himself in striving to couple the cartography of navigation to some at least of the early navigators who reach British Shores."
Author
Sotzmann, Daniel Friedrich
Note
Color map of the State of New Jersey. Shows administrative divisions, major cities, roads and rivers. Relief shown by hachures. Place names in English and German. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington. In upper right margin: No. VIII. In lower right margin: "Zu Ebelings Erdbeschreibung von Amerika."
Author
Doolittle, Amos
Note
Issued in vol 1 of the 1797 edition of Trumbull's history, opposite the title page (the History vol is not present here); the map was not issued in the complete 2 volume edition of 1818. Thompson says this map is inferior to Doolittle's Connecticut map of 1795 for Carey, however I find it a more interesting map. Outline color by county.
Author
[Mudge, William, Williams, Edward]
Note
Uncolored folded map. Covers Coast regions of Sussex and Kent between Beachy Head and Whitstable. Showing major cities. Relief shown by hachures.
Author
[Mudge, William, Williams, Edward]
Note
Uncolored folded map. Covers Weymouth and Land's End. Showing major cities. Relief shown by hachures. First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
[Mudge, William, Williams, Edward]
Note
Introduction to part 2. First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
[Mudge, William, Williams, Edward]
Note
Introduction to part 2. First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
[Mudge, William, Williams, Edward]
Note
Contents to part 2. First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
[Mudge, William, Williams, Edward]
Note
Contents to part 2. First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
[Mudge, William, Williams, Edward]
Note
First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
[Mudge, William, Williams, Edward]
Note
First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
[Mudge, William, 1762-1820, Williams, Edward]
Note
First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
[Mudge, William, 1762-1820, Williams, Edward]
Note
First edition, one volume in two parts. Part 1: year 1791-1794: iv, 179, [1] p., [4] folded maps, and views. Read before the Royal Society, June 25, 1795. Part 2: year 1795-1796: iv, 111 p. folded maps. Read before the Royal Society, May 11, 1797. Both parts bound in one volume covers with red full morocco, gilt edges and inner dentelles, spine with gilt tooled raised band with "Trigonometry Survey" stamped in gilt. First published annually in the Philosophical Transactions, by Captain William Mudge, F.R.S. and Mr. Isaac Dalby. ... Founded in 1791, these important works provide a contemporary account of the early years of the Ordnance Survey, focusing on the methodology of triangulation and the equipment used during those first enterprises. The works were subsequently revised with two additional parts added, all published under a slightly different title between 1799 and 1811. These earlier issues are particularly uncommon.
Author
La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788
Note
Engraved map with inset. Relief shown pictorially. Inset covers area from Kamchatka to Kanaga in the Aleutians, including the Kommandorskii Islands; scale (ca. 1:14,500,000)
Author
[La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788, Mourelle de la Rua, Francisco Antonio, 1750-1820]
Note
Engraved map. Includes notes on dates of discoveries, sources of names used, etc.
Author
La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788
Note
Two engraved maps. Relief shown by hachures. Prime meridian: Paris.
Author
[La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788, Ozanne, Nicolas Marie, 1728-1811]
Note
Engraved drawing.
Author
La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788
Note
Two engraved maps. Relief shown by hachures; depths by soundings. Scales of maps: Maouna (ca. 1:148,000), L'Anse du Massacre (ca. 1:2,100). Oriented with north toward bottom.
Author
[Bougainville, Louis-Antoine de, comte, 1729-1811, La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788]
Note
Engraved map. Relief shown by hachures. Inset map: Extrait des Cartes du voyage de M. de Bougainville autour du monde en 1768. Includes 11 coastal views of Pola, Ololava, Maouna and Opoun, and table of islands with coordinates. Shows La Perouse's route.
Author
[La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788, Prevost, Guillaume]
Note
Fifteen engraved drawings.
Author
[Blondela, Lieut., La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788]
Note
Two engraved drawings.
Author
[Blondela, Lieut., La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788]
Note
Two engraved drawings.
Author
[Blondela, Lieut., La Perouse, Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de, 1741-1788]
Note
Two engraved drawings.
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