Early printed maps of Kent

Similar documents
The Use of Maps in County History

Re-drawing of OS First Edition 1:2500 sheets for a later First Edition printing

Medieval History. The Chartulary of the Augustinian Priory of St John the Evangelist of the Park of Healaugh

Art and Architecture. A Dictionary of Irish Artists

Classics. Aeneidea. Books of enduring scholarly value

Medieval History. Court Rolls of the Manor of Wakefield

Literary Studies. Notes and Emendations to the Text of Shakespeare s Plays

Cambridge University Press Aftermath: A Supplement to the Golden Bough James George Frazer Frontmatter More information

Classics. Etymologicum Graecae Linguae Gudianum

A Bibliography of Bagpipe Music

Notes on footnoting and references for submitted work:

Comments in 1981 on claims by B. J. Ford on the subject of Leeuwenhoek s histology specimens

Medieval History. Early Yorkshire Charters

Travel in Time: Reading Records of Local Travel in the Margins of Early Modern English Almanacs

Britannia Notes for Contributors I. Articles and Shorter Contributions

Topography stated "This is the most superficial of all master Norden's. xii

A Bibliography of Bagpipe Music

PARODY SONGS Rubric - for Poster

Malmö 2 nd International Philatelic Summit

The Life and Letters of Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq

The Year Books Or Reports in the Following Reigns, with Notes to Brooke and Fitzherbert s Abridgments (1678, )

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education

The Prose Works. Sir Philip Sidney

Miscellaneous Documentary Research on the Hepworth Mine, Rural Alsey, Scott County, Illinois

Travel and Exploration. Narrative of a Journey in the Interior of China, and of a Voyage to and from that Country in the Years 1816 and 1817

Submitting Manuscripts to AQSG. (Updated September 2013)

Chronicon Angliæ ab Anno Domini 1328 usque ad Annum 1388

Archaeology. The Palace of Minos

Album of British mosses

Sheetlines. The journal of THE CHARLES CLOSE SOCIETY for the Study of Ordnance Survey Maps. How and where Roger Hellyer

Thesis/Dissertation Preparation Guidelines

Etchings of Wenceslaus Hollar in the Collections of the Folger Shakespeare Library

REPORT OF THE LIBRARIAN.

MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION

Style Sheet for Papers in History

DISCOVERY and PROVENANCE of HAMLET Q1. Abraham Samuel Shiff. The literature gives conflicting dates for the discovery of Q1. Some scholars state 1823,

Printed Special Collections in Durham University Library: a Guide to Catalogues

[PDF] History Of Africa

The Anglo Saxon Chronicles

CATALOGING THE ENGLISH CIVIL WARS

Freda Pastor Berkowitz proofs, FLP.CLRC.BERKOWITZ

MS-0870 Smithsonian Institution. National Anthropological Archives Photocopies m

The Prose Works of Sir Philip Sidney

Idealist and materialist interpretations of BL Harley 7368, the Sir Thomas More manuscript

Instant Words Group 1

ftäx VtàtÄÉzâxá Éy UÄt~x:á jéü~á

Repository: Special Collections and Archives, Paul Laurence Dunbar Library, Wright State University, Dayton, OH , (937)

Hannah Dustin French. Bookbinding in Early America

HERBERT EDWIN LOMBARD

Chapter 4: Illuminated Manuscripts

From a Diary, September 1985

Contents: As in the domestic issue, above, except that p. 2 contains a publisher s advertisement listing four titles in Unwin s Colonial Library.

Why t? TEACHER NOTES MATH NSPIRED. Math Objectives. Vocabulary. About the Lesson

FIRST LANGUAGE ENGLISH

[PDF] Complete Lyric Pieces For Piano (Dover Music For Piano)

Books of enduring scholarly value. Polar Exploration

Fiction and Poetry. A Christmas Carol. Books of enduring scholarly value

CBA LFL 9/22/2015 1

On The Nature Of The Universe (Oxford World's Classics) PDF

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education

To gather rare books and manuscripts, such as would be of the greatest educational, historical and literary interest and use.

Conditions of Use. This dissertation and the accompanying photographic files of shell gorgets are all 1966 Jon Muller.

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education

Kerry musings David Archer. Sheetlines, 85 (August 2009), pp.51-54

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education

Arthur Tooth & Sons stock inventories and accounts, No online items

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

Thesis and Dissertation Handbook

A Bibliography of Bagpipe Music

in this web service Cambridge University Press

Turning the Page University of Toronto E-book Study Warren Holder University of Toronto Libraries

Sight Singing & Ear Training I MUT 1241~ 1 credit

Photography and the Power of Communication

We help older performers fulfill their theatrical dreams!

Guide to the Walt Whitman Collection

The Hegel Marx Connection

CBA LFL 9/22/2015 1

Astronomy 15 Reading Report. Research a topic of interest to you in contemporary astronomy;

Comedies, Histories & Tragedies (Facsimile Of First Folio Edition Of Shakespeare) By William Shakespeare READ ONLINE

THESES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATION. Printing Presses in the County of Szabolcs Written by: Edit L. Major. Loránd Eötvös University

Music. The Life of Ludwig van Beethoven

STORIES FROM CHAUCER. Notes and Introduction

HAND LIST MICROFILM AND SELECTED MICROFICHE SETS FOLGER SHAKESPEARE LIBRARY

SIR WALTER RALEGH AND HIS READERS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY

1. USE OF UNIVERSITY BRAND

AN HISTORICAL ATLAS OF MODERN EUROPE FROM 1789 TO 1914

No Other Work of The Sixteenth Century Equals it VESALIUS, Andreas. De humani corporis fabrica libri ſeptem. Baſel: Johannes Oporinus

Friday 5 June 2015 Afternoon

History. Ancient Laws and Institutes of England

Frances Salomon Murphy writings, 1953 FLP.CLRC.MURPHY

EXPERTS ARE PUZZLED. by LAURA RIDING

Fast speeds dramatic techniques

SOME NOTES ON DATING WHITCOMBE & TOMBS PUBLICATIONS,

The Oxford History Of Ancient Egypt Oxford Illustrated History

Probably the Greatest of all Theatrical Prints from Any Period -Gascoigne

Sir George Lee ( ) Papers

HOW TO PREPARE A SCIENTIFIC DOCTORAL DISSERTATION BASED ON RESEARCH ARTICLES

INFORMATION FOR AUTHORS

This page intentionally left blank

HKCEE, HKALE and HKDSE text types

Transcription:

Early printed maps of Kent The following file is an expanded version of a section of my latest book (Flight 2010, pp. 269-70). Both as works of art and as historical documents, early printed maps have attracted a good deal of attention, reflected in numerous books and articles of which I have to confess to being very largely ignorant (my excuse being that I am interested only in maps of Kent, and only incidentally in them). Most of the people named below are the subject of articles in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography,* and the references cited there will point any reader who wants to know more in the right direction. * Alternatively they can be searched for on the web. Anyone who googles "charles whitwell" or "peter stent" will know as much as I do about these men. Saxton 1575. The earliest printed map which represents Kent with tolerable accuracy and with a respectable amount of detail is a map of the four south-eastern counties (Kent, Sussex, Surrey, Middlesex) drawn by Christopher Saxton (occ. 1573-98). It was one of a series of maps covering the whole of England and Wales, completed and formally published in 1579. This particular plate was engraved (by Remigius Hogenbergius) in 1575; some finishing touches were added in 1577-8. The portion covering Kent was reproduced by Livett (1938), for purposes of comparison with the maps which follow. Anonymous. The earliest separate map of Kent is also the first to show the ancient 'lathes': it makes a point of mentioning their existence in its title, 'The Shyre of Kent, Diuided into the five Lathes therof' (Box 1926, Livett 1938). It was copied from Saxton's map,* probably without permission; the engraver made a Anonymous - state 1 (1576-7?)

space for his name beneath the scale, but never wrote anything into it. There are some original elements (Livett 1938, pp. 268-70), most conspicuously the dotted lines showing the 'lathe' boundaries. (In one place a more densely dotted line is the start of an attempt to show the hundred boundaries as well.) It seems likely that this map was published in 1576-7 (before Saxton was awarded a monopoly), on the expectation that people who bought a copy of Lambard's Perambulation of Kent (1576) might also wish to buy a map of the county; and the circumstantial evidence suggests to me that Lambard himself was involved in its publication.** * This was proved by Livett (1938). The engraver, he thought, was the same man who made two of the plates for Saxton's atlas, Northamptonshire... Huntingdonshire (1576) and Worcestershire (1577). ** A sketch-map drawn by Lambard, 'Carde of the Beacons in Kent' (BL Add. 62935), dated 1585, took its outlines from this anonymous map. An engraved version of Lambard's map was included in the second edition (1596) of his book. The plate for the anonymous map survived for more than fifty years, perhaps for very much longer. With one alteration and a few additions (Box 1926, p. 90), the map was reissued to accompany a pamphlet called The inrichment of the Weald of Kent, first published in 1625 but reprinted at intervals from 1631 till 1664. The three places added in this version of the map are all places mentioned in the pamphlet: Chafford was the home of the dedicatee, Sir George Rivers (d. 1630). The third and latest version of the map is one which shows the main roads (Box 1926, 1927); two copies cited by Box are printed on paper which, from the watermark, was tentatively dated to circa 1720-30 (Box 1926, p. 92). It looks as if this version of the map was intended to illustrate a book about somebody's travels through Anonymous - state 3

Kent (including a visit to Margate), but I have not been able to identify the hypothetical book. Simonson 1596. Far more accurate than either of the previous maps is the half-inch map surveyed and drawn by Philip Simonson (d. 1598) of Rochester. It was engraved (in London) by Charles Whitwell (occ. 1582-1611), as two sheets to be joined down the middle, and first published in 1596 - that is, at around the same time as the second edition of Lambard's book. The title refers back to that of the anonymous map: Simonson's map is called 'A NEW DESCRIPTION OF KENT Divided into the fyue Lathes therof' (Hannen 1914, Livett 1938). Lambard recommends it to his readers in glowing terms (1596, pp. 220-1); though he does not exactly say so, I think we may be sure that he had helped to get this map published. (Lambard and Simonson were both connected with Rochester Bridge - Lambard had been a member of the governing body since 1585, Simonson was appointed paymaster in 1593 (Hannen 1915) - and presumably that was how they became acquainted.) Copies of this map in its original form are very rare; almost all the surviving specimens - including the one reproduced by Hannen (1914) - carry the added imprint of the London printseller Peter Stent (occ. 1642-65), who had evidently somehow got possession of the plates. At Stent's instigation, the map was next embellished with inset views of Dover ("W. Hollar fecit") and Rye ("Sr Anthony Van Dyck delineavit").* A fourth state adds Stent's address, 'at ye white Horse in giltspure street', and the date '1659'. * I do not see that Livett (1938, p. 274) had any warrant for assuming that Van Dyck (who died in 1641) was still alive at the time. Mostly these copies survive through having been bound into copies of Thomas Philipott's Villare Cantianum (1659, reprinted 1664). Norden 1605. The next map, dated 1605, was drawn by John Norden (d. 1625) and engraved by William Kip (occ. 1597-1618). It is a

very pretty piece of work. Mostly it was copied from Simonson's map, but some of the detail is different. It was specifically designed as an illustration for William Camden's Britannia - it was included in the folio edition of the Latin text (1607) and in the English translation (1610, reprinted 1637) - and many of the new labels (such as DVROLENVM and PORTVS LEMANVS) were obviously added in compliance with instructions from Camden. This map of Norden's does not appear to have ever been published separately in any form.* Perhaps for that reason, it had no progeny. * A description of Kent written by Norden, of the kind which accompanied his published maps, was, by Nicolson (1696, pp. 39-40), reported to exist in manuscript. I have not tried to track it down. Speed 1611. The map which set the pattern was the one published by John Speed (1551/2-1629) in his atlas called The theatre of the empire of Great Britaine (1611). Like the other plates, this one was engraved for Speed in Amsterdam, in the workship of Joost de Hondt, alias Jodocus Hondius (1563-1612). Not counting the insets around the edges (coats of arms of the earls of Kent, bird's-eye views of Canterbury and Rochester), this map, in its original form, was hardly anything more than a somewhat inaccurate, somewhat simplified copy of Simonson's map. Within a few years, it had picked up some additions from Norden's map (REGULBIUM is one which can be seen at a glance), but after that it seems to have stayed the same. The only variation that I can see affects the imprint, added for the 1627 edition (at the bottom centre, to the right of the stylized representation of the battle of Hastings), altered for subsequent editions in 1650 and 1676. With the rest of Speed's atlas, this map of Kent was frequently reprinted; and it was very frequently copied by later generations of cartographers - who, whether they knew it or not, were copying a rather poor copy of Simonson's map, enhanced with some antiquarian details copied from Norden's map. References E. G. Box, 'Lambarde's "Carde of this Shyre"', Archaeologia Cantiana, 38 (1926), 89-95. E. G. Box, 'Lambarde's "Carde of this Shyre," third issue, with roads added', Archaeologia Cantiana, 39 (1927), 141-8. C. Flight, The survey of Kent: documents relating to the survey of the county conducted in 1086 (British Archaeological Reports, British Series 506, Oxford, 2010). H. Hannen, 'An account of a map of Kent dated 1596', Archaeologia Cantiana, 30 (1914), 85-92. H. Hannen, 'Further notes on Phil. Symonson', Archaeologia Cantiana, 31 (1915), 271-4. G. M. Livett, 'Early Kent maps (sixteenth century)', Archaeologia

Cantiana, 49 (1938), 247-77. G. M. Livett, 'Supplementary note on early Kent maps', Archaeologia Cantiana, 50 (1939), 140-6. W. Nicolson, The English historical library, 2 parts (London, 1696-7). Additional references A. Globe, Peter Stent London printseller circa 1642-1665 (Vancouver, 1985). -- p. 101 for the Simonson map R. Pennington, A descriptive catalogue of the etched work of Wenceslaus Hollar 1607-1677 (Cambridge, 1982). -- pp. 111-12 for Hollar's additions to the Simonson map Postscript (May 2010) Since writing this piece, I have become aware of the existence of an online catalogue of early maps of Kent compiled by Tony Burgess (www.oldkentmaps.co.uk). This is a very thorough piece of work (I only wish that I had discovered it sooner), and these remarks of mine are, in comparison, derivative and superficial. But they seem to be correct as far as they go; so I have left them unchanged. First posted Mar 2010, last revised July 2011