User Guide 12 : Maps and Plans
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Catalogue Summer 2012
JONATHAN POTTER ANTIQUE MAPS CATALOGUE SUMMER 2012 INTRODUCTION 2012 was always going to be an exciting year in London and Britain with the long- anticipated Queen’s Jubilee celebrations and the holding of the Olympic Games. To add to this, Jonathan Potter Ltd has moved to new gallery premises in Marylebone, one of the most pleasant parts of central London. After nearly 35 years in Mayfair, the move north of Oxford Street seemed a huge step to take, but is only a few minutes’ walk from Bond Street. 52a George Street is set in an attractive area of good hotels and restaurants, fine Georgian residential properties and interesting retail outlets. Come and visit us. Our summer catalogue features a fascinating mixture of over 100 interesting, rare and decorative maps covering a period of almost five hundred years. From the fifteenth century incunable woodcut map of the ancient world from Schedels’ ‘Chronicarum...’ to decorative 1960s maps of the French wine regions, the range of maps available to collectors and enthusiasts whether for study or just decoration is apparent. Although the majority of maps fall within the ‘traditional’ definition of antique, we have included a number of twentieth and late ninteenth century publications – a significant period in history and cartography which we find fascinating and in which we are seeing a growing level of interest and appreciation. AN ILLUSTRATED SELECTION OF ANTIQUE MAPS, ATLASES, CHARTS AND PLANS AVAILABLE FROM We hope you find the catalogue interesting and please, if you don’t find what you are looking for, ask us - we have many, many more maps in stock, on our website and in the JONATHAN POTTER LIMITED gallery. -
Mavis Dixon VAD Database.Xlsx
County Durham Voluntary Aid Detachment workers, 1914-1919 www.durhamatwar.org.uk Surname Forename Address Role Further information Service from 2/1915 to 12/1915 and 7/1916 to 8/1917. 13th Durham Margaret Ann Mount Stewart St., V.A.H., Vane House, Seaham Harbour. Husband George William, Coal Lacey Nurse. Part time. 1610 hours worked. (Mrs) Dawdon Miner/Stoneman, son Benjamin. Born Felling c1880. Married 1901 Easington District – maiden name McElwee. Bon Accord, Foggy Furze, Service from 12/1915 to date. 8th Durham V.A.H., Normanhurst, West Ladyman Grace Cook. Part time. 2016 hours worked. West Hartlepool Hartlepool. Not in Hartlepool 1911. C/o Mrs. Atkinson, Service from 1915 to 1/1917. 17th Durham V.A.H., The Red House, Laidler Mary E Wellbank, Morpeth. Sister. Full time. Paid. Etherley, Bishop Auckland. Too many on 1911 census to get a safe Crossed out on the card. match. Service from 1/11/1918 to 1/4/1919. Oulton Hall (Officers’ Hospital), C/o Mrs J Watson, 39 High Waitress. Pay - £26 per annum. Full Laine Emily Leeds. Attd. Military Hospital, Ripon 6/1918 and 7/1918. Not in Crook Jobs Hill, Crook time. on 1911 census. 7 Thornhill Park, Kitchen helper. 30 hours alternate Service from 12/1917 to 2/1919. 3rd Durham V.A.H., Hammerton Laing E. Victoria Sunderland weeks. House, 4 Gray Road, Sunderland. Unable to trace 1911 census. Lake Frank West Park Road, Cleadon Private. Driver. Service from 30/2/1917 to 1919. Unable to trace 1911 census. 15 Rowell St., West Service from 19/2/1917 to 1919. -
The History of Cartography, Volume 3
THE HISTORY OF CARTOGRAPHY VOLUME THREE Volume Three Editorial Advisors Denis E. Cosgrove Richard Helgerson Catherine Delano-Smith Christian Jacob Felipe Fernández-Armesto Richard L. Kagan Paula Findlen Martin Kemp Patrick Gautier Dalché Chandra Mukerji Anthony Grafton Günter Schilder Stephen Greenblatt Sarah Tyacke Glyndwr Williams The History of Cartography J. B. Harley and David Woodward, Founding Editors 1 Cartography in Prehistoric, Ancient, and Medieval Europe and the Mediterranean 2.1 Cartography in the Traditional Islamic and South Asian Societies 2.2 Cartography in the Traditional East and Southeast Asian Societies 2.3 Cartography in the Traditional African, American, Arctic, Australian, and Pacific Societies 3 Cartography in the European Renaissance 4 Cartography in the European Enlightenment 5 Cartography in the Nineteenth Century 6 Cartography in the Twentieth Century THE HISTORY OF CARTOGRAPHY VOLUME THREE Cartography in the European Renaissance PART 1 Edited by DAVID WOODWARD THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS • CHICAGO & LONDON David Woodward was the Arthur H. Robinson Professor Emeritus of Geography at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637 The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London © 2007 by the University of Chicago All rights reserved. Published 2007 Printed in the United States of America 1615141312111009080712345 Set ISBN-10: 0-226-90732-5 (cloth) ISBN-13: 978-0-226-90732-1 (cloth) Part 1 ISBN-10: 0-226-90733-3 (cloth) ISBN-13: 978-0-226-90733-8 (cloth) Part 2 ISBN-10: 0-226-90734-1 (cloth) ISBN-13: 978-0-226-90734-5 (cloth) Editorial work on The History of Cartography is supported in part by grants from the Division of Preservation and Access of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Geography and Regional Science Program and Science and Society Program of the National Science Foundation, independent federal agencies. -
Brancepeth APPROVED 2009
Heritage, Landscape and Design Brancepeth APPROVED 2009 1 INTRODUCTION ............................ - 4 - 1.1 CONSERVATION AREAS ...................- 4 - 1.2 WHAT IS A CONSERVATION AREA?...- 4 - 1.3 WHO DESIGNATES CONSERVATION AREAS? - 4 - 1.4 WHAT DOES DESIGNATION MEAN?....- 5 - 1.5 WHAT IS A CONSERVATION AREA APPRAISAL? - 6 - 1.6 WHAT IS THE DEFINITION OF SPECIAL INTEREST,CHARACTER AND APPEARANCE? - 7 - 1.7 CONSERVATION AREA MANAGEMENT PROPOSALS - 7 - 1.8 WHO WILL USE THE CONSERVATION AREA APPRAISAL? - 8 - 2 BRANCEPETH CONSERVATION AREA - 8 - 2.1 THE CONTEXT OF THE CONSERVATION AREA - 8 - 2.2 DESIGNATION ...............................- 10 - 2.3 DESCRIPTION OF THE AREA............- 10 - 2.4 SCHEDULE OF THE AREA ...............- 10 - 2.5 HISTORY OF THE AREA ..................- 12 - 3 CHARACTER ZONES .................. - 14 - 3.1 GENERAL .....................................- 14 - 3.2 ZONES A AND B............................- 15 - 3.3 ZONE C........................................- 16 - 3.4 ZONE D........................................- 17 - 3.5 ZONE E ........................................- 18 - 3.6 ZONES F, G AND H........................- 20 - 4 TOWNSCAPE AND LANDSCAPE ANALYSIS - 21 - 4.1 DISTINCTIVE CHARACTER...............- 21 - 4.2 ARCHAEOLOGY.............................- 22 - 4.3 PRINCIPAL LAND USE ...................- 22 - 4.4 PLAN FORM..................................- 22 - 4.5 VIEWS INTO, WITHIN AND OUT OF THE CONSERVATION AREA - 23 - 4.6 STREET PATTERNS AND SCENES ....- 24 - 4.7 PEDESTRIAN ROUTES ....................- -
Peterboroughcaav2 New2017.Indd
6.0 SUMMARY OF ISSUES 6.01 The new public realm works to Cathedral Square, St John’s Square, Cowgate, Long Causeway and Bridge Street and architectural lighting for aesthetic effect have brought about significant enhancement, creating attractive places. Westgate Broadway and Midgate (adjacent to the Conservation Area) are programmed for improvement under the Public Realm Strategy in the next couple of years. 6.02 The pedestrianisation of the principal shopping streets within the city centre has had a major positive impact on the ability to enjoy the historic environment and spaces within these parts of the Conservation Area. Elsewhere, although it can create a lively bustle and give animation to the streets, traffic more often detracts from the character and setting of the Conservation Area. On-street car parking is visually intrusive along Cowgate and the busy bus and taxi route of Broadway and Westgate is distracting and gives rise to unattractive and cluttering guardrails and traffic signs. 6.03 Vacancy at ground floor level is not at present a concern throughout the Conservation Area, although there are a small number of vacant retail units. Vacancy appears to be a greater problem at upper floor level above ground floor retail units. This presents a threat to the long-term survival of such buildings through a lack of regular maintenance and investment. There are few long- term vacant historic buildings within the Conservation Area, with two notable exceptions being Nos. 51 and 55 Priestgate. 6.04 The impact of Bourges Boulevard is severe and has a profound detrimental impact across the periphery of the Conservation Area, with severe negative impacts on Cowgate, Priestgate and Bridge Street. -
Exploring the River Wear-Part 1
Armchair Adventurers Explore The River Wear G eog rap Part 1 from the Pennines to the outskirts of Durham hy A period. On the sea bed a limy ooze full of the rch y aeo eolog log G decaying skeletons of sea creatures built up. y Rivers washed down sand and gravel building His up deltas, and forests flourished on the deltas tory and swampy margins. Periodically the seas rose, drowned the deltas and forests and more Geology ooze was deposited; then sea levels dropped The River Wear rises in the North Pennines and and the deltas and forests returned. This cycle flows in an easterly direction to empty in the with compression gave rise to sedimentary North Sea at Sunderland. Weardale is in an rocks. The oozes became limestone, the sands, gravels and muds became shale and sandstone, and the forests became coal. Limestone and sandstone are resistant to erosion, whereas the softer shales wear away more easily. This contrast has produced the terraced hillsides which are characteristic of the whole area and the hard limestone outcrops form waterfalls created by the erosion. area designated for it’s Outstanding Natural Beauty. It is also a UNESCO Global Geopark. A Geopark is a place of outstanding geological heritage which is used to support sustainable development through conservation, education, interpretation and nature tourism. High Force Waterfall Limestone is the dominant rock in Upper The landscape has evolved over 500 million Weardale. Its main constituent, calcium years. During that time the valley has been carbonate, is soluble in rainwater which is liquid molten rock, desert,tropical sea,swamps, acidic and has eroded it to form sink holes, and an ice sheet. -
Mapmaking in England, Ca. 1470–1650
54 • Mapmaking in England, ca. 1470 –1650 Peter Barber The English Heritage to vey, eds., Local Maps and Plans from Medieval England (Oxford: 1525 Clarendon Press, 1986); Mapmaker’s Art for Edward Lyman, The Map- world maps maker’s Art: Essays on the History of Maps (London: Batchworth Press, 1953); Monarchs, Ministers, and Maps for David Buisseret, ed., Mon- archs, Ministers, and Maps: The Emergence of Cartography as a Tool There is little evidence of a significant cartographic pres- of Government in Early Modern Europe (Chicago: University of Chi- ence in late fifteenth-century England in terms of most cago Press, 1992); Rural Images for David Buisseret, ed., Rural Images: modern indices, such as an extensive familiarity with and Estate Maps in the Old and New Worlds (Chicago: University of Chi- use of maps on the part of its citizenry, a widespread use cago Press, 1996); Tales from the Map Room for Peter Barber and of maps for administration and in the transaction of busi- Christopher Board, eds., Tales from the Map Room: Fact and Fiction about Maps and Their Makers (London: BBC Books, 1993); and TNA ness, the domestic production of printed maps, and an ac- for The National Archives of the UK, Kew (formerly the Public Record 1 tive market in them. Although the first map to be printed Office). in England, a T-O map illustrating William Caxton’s 1. This notion is challenged in Catherine Delano-Smith and R. J. P. Myrrour of the Worlde of 1481, appeared at a relatively Kain, English Maps: A History (London: British Library, 1999), 28–29, early date, no further map, other than one illustrating a who state that “certainly by the late fourteenth century, or at the latest by the early fifteenth century, the practical use of maps was diffusing 1489 reprint of Caxton’s text, was to be printed for sev- into society at large,” but the scarcity of surviving maps of any descrip- 2 eral decades. -
NORTH EAST Contents
HERITAGE AT RISK 2013 / NORTH EAST Contents HERITAGE AT RISK III THE REGISTER VII Content and criteria VII Criteria for inclusion on the Register VIII Reducing the risks X Publications and guidance XIII Key to the entries XV Entries on the Register by local planning authority XVII County Durham (UA) 1 Northumberland (UA) 11 Northumberland (NP) 30 Tees Valley 38 Darlington (UA) 38 Hartlepool (UA) 40 Middlesbrough (UA) 41 North York Moors (NP) 41 Redcar and Cleveland (UA) 41 StocktononTees (UA) 43 Tyne and Wear 44 Gateshead 44 Newcastle upon Tyne 46 North Tyneside 48 South Tyneside 48 Sunderland 49 II Heritage at Risk is our campaign to save listed buildings and important historic sites, places and landmarks from neglect or decay. At its heart is the Heritage at Risk Register, an online database containing details of each site known to be at risk. It is analysed and updated annually and this leaflet summarises the results. Heritage at Risk teams are now in each of our nine local offices, delivering national expertise locally. The good news is that we are on target to save 25% (1,137) of the sites that were on the Register in 2010 by 2015. From Clifford’s Fort, North Tyneside to the Church of St Andrew, Haughton le Skerne, this success is down to good partnerships with owners, developers, the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF), Natural England, councils and local groups. It will be increasingly important to build on these partnerships to achieve the overall aim of reducing the number of sites on the Register. -
The Historic County of Westmorland
The Historic County of Westmorland A Case Study on the range, availability and usefulness of publications relating to the Historic County of Westmorland, and on the current provision of support for Local Historical Studies, with specific reference to the county town of Kendal Contents Introduction 3 Purpose and Scope of the Report 3 The Historic County of Westmorland 4 A Survey and Critical Evaluation of the Scholarly Resources Relevant to the History of the County of Westmorland, and to the County Town of Kendal, from the Early Modern Period to the Present Day Antiquarians and Archive Makers of the 16th and 17th Centuries 6 The First County History in Print 12 In Search of the Picturesque/Losing sight of the Goal 13 Late 19th Century Foundation of Modern Historical Scholarship 15 The Historical Society and the Victoria County History 16 Local History Groups 17 Contemporary Narratives for Kendal 18 An Assessment of Current Provision for Local History Studies in Westmorland and the County Town of Kendal Libraries and Archives 19 Online/Digital Resources 20 Conclusion 21 Bibliography 22 Appendices 26 Appendix I Annotated Lists of Published Resources Appendix Ia Selected 16th & 17th Century Scholarship Appendix Ib Selected 18th Century Scholarship Appendix Ic Selected 19th Century Scholarship Appendix Id Selected Modern Scholarship Appendix Ie Selected Cartographic Evidence Appendix If Selected Resources for Kendal Appendix II Libraries, Archives and Record Offices Appendix III Historical Societies and Local History Groups Appendix IV Online/Digital Resources Illustrations Cover: Detail from William Hole’s county map of ‘Cumberlande, Westmorlande’ of 1622, created to illustrate Michael Drayton’s 15,000-line poem the Poly-Olbion P4: ‘The Countie Westmorland and Kendale the Cheif Towne Described with the Arms of Such Nobles as have been Earles of Either of Them’. -
MAPS in the COLLECTION of the FOLGER SHAKESPEARE LIBRARY Chronological List Compiled by Leigh Anne Palmer, 2004, Based on Entries in Howgego, Printed Maps of London
updated 2012.03.16 EB LONDON MAPS IN THE COLLECTION OF THE FOLGER SHAKESPEARE LIBRARY Chronological list compiled by Leigh Anne Palmer, 2004, based on entries in Howgego, Printed Maps of London [Part of a plan of London engraved, perhaps by Frans Hogenberg, in or after 1560 from original drawing probably made by Anthonis van den Wyngaerde]. Full size photographic prints of 2 surviving copperplates of a plan of London engraved about 1560. Note: Only the two copperplates are known to have survived. They are held in the London Museum. MAP L85c no. 19 pt.1-2 ph [Hogenberg, Frans]. LONDINUM FERACISSIMI ANGLIAE REGNI METROPOLIS [1572]. From Braun & Hogenberg's Civitates orbis terrarum. MAP L85b no.4; MAP L85c no. 27; ART Vol. d71 no.3; ART 206773; ART 229985.1; GA795 .L6 L6 Cage fo Belle Forest, Francois de. La Ville de Londres. Londinum Feracissimi Angliae Regni Metropolis. 1575. Printed in La cosmographie de tout le monde par Francois de Belle Forest, 1575. Printed in G113 .M7 1575 vol. 1 Cage, pp 102-3 Norden, John. LONDON. Ioannes Norden Anglus descripsit anno 1593. Pieter Van den Keere fecit. Printed in Speculum Britanniae: A historicall and chorographicall description of Middlesex. The first parte. p. 26. London, 1593. MAP L85a no.7 Valegio, Francesco. LONDRA. [1595]. Also printed in Raccolta di le pui illustre et famose citta di tuttoil mondo [1600] and Universus terrarium orbis scriptorium calamo delineatus, tomus secondus. 1713. 1713 printing collected in ART Vol. d82 no.13c Münster, Sebastian. London oder Lunden die Haupestatt in Engellande. LONDINUM FERACIS: ANG. -
Land at Crown Street and Silver Street Reading Berkshire
Land at Crown Street and Silver Street Reading Berkshire Archaeological Evaluation for CgMs Consulting on behalf of Montpelier Estates Ltd CA Project: 770573 CA Report: 18099 February 2018 Land at Crown Street and Silver Street Reading Berkshire Archaeological Evaluation CA Project: 770573 CA Report: 18099 Document Control Grid Revision Date Author Checked by Status Reasons for Approved revision by A 9/2/18 AH Ray Internal General Edit Richard Kennedy Review Greatorex This report is confidential to the client. Cotswold Archaeology accepts no responsibility or liability to any third party to whom this report, or any part of it, is made known. Any such party relies upon this report entirely at their own risk. No part of this report may be reproduced by any means without permission. © Cotswold Archaeology © Cotswold Archaeology Land at Crown Street and Silver Street: Archaeological Evaluation CONTENTS SUMMARY ..................................................................................................................... 2 1. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................ 3 2. ARCHAEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND ................................................................ 3 3. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES ................................................................................... 8 4. METHODOLOGY ............................................................................................... 9 5. RESULTS (FIGS 2-5) ........................................................................................ -
Recent Accessions to the Cambridgeshire Collection 2009 Chris Jakes
Recent Accessions to the Cambridgeshire Collection 2009 Chris Jakes ABINGTON NATUREWATCH BLAKEMAN, Pamela The record 2007–2008. A mixed bag: poems about Ely and the Black Fens. [Great Abington. Abington Naturewatch. 2009.] [Ely. The Author.] 2009. ALVEY, Jane BLAKEMAN, Pamela East Anglian Film Archive: the collections. The Victorian restoration and refurbishment of Ely Norwich. EAFA. 2008. Cathedral 1837–1901. [Ely]. FrameCharge Press. [2009] ANGLIA RUSKIN UNIVERSITY Cambridge school of art 1858–2008: new drawings to BLANCHARD, Gill commemorate the 150th anniversary of the School of Art Tracing your East Anglian ancestors. and the origins of Anglia Ruskin University. Barnsley. Pen & Sword. 2009. Cambridge. ARU. 2008. ISBN 9781844159895 ISBN 9780907262701 BOWEN, Anthony BEARN, Alexander G. Cambridge orations 1993–2007. Sir Clifford Allbutt: scholar and physician. Cambridge. CUP 2008. London. Royal College of Physicians. 2007. ISBN 9780521737623 ISBN 9781860163029 BOWMAN, Martin W. BENDALL, Sarah Duxford and the Big Wings 1940–45: RAF and USAAF The earliest known map of Ely: John Speed’s survey map fighter pilots at war. of 1607. Barnsley. Pen & Sword Aviation. 2009. Ely. Ely Society. 2009. ISBN 9781848840249 ISBN 9780903616287 BOWMAN, Martin BEVIS, Trevor Memories of the air war in East Anglia: a nostalgic Drawings of old March. tribute to the US 8th Air Force in Norfolk, Suffolk, March. The Author. 2009. Cambridgeshire & beyond. ISBN 0901680842 Wellington. Halsgrove. 2009. ISBN 9781841149387 BEVIS, Trevor A fair fenny island: aerial views of March, Wimblington BRODRIBB, John. and Doddington. The main lines of East Anglia. March. The Author. 2008. Hersham. Oxford Publishing Co. 2009. ISBN 0901680826 ISBN 9780860936299 BLACK & VEATCH BROOKE, Christopher Strategic environmental assessment Great Ouse tidal river A portrait of Gonville and Caius College.