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Mr. Philip D. Burden
P.O. Box 863,
Chalfont St. Giles, Bucks HP6 9HD,
UNITED KINGDOM
Tel: +44 (0) 1494 76 33 13
Email: enquiries@caburden.com
In this example the Index leaf is state D (with a four-line heading and three columns), there are eighty-three coats of arms and one blank. As in most others seen at recent auction, thirteen maps bear Seckford’s pre-1576 motto (Pestis patriae pigricies), and twenty-two his later motto (Industria naturam ornat). All are in their final published state. The paper bears the normal bunch-of-grapes watermark which traditionally indicates an earlier issue.
The presence of the plate of Coats of Arms would indicate a date of issue closer to 1590, certainly no earlier than September 1589 the date in which Sir Thomas Heneage became as noted Vice-Chancellor. Indeed this date is now being debated as the date of first publication. Its distribution in the early days appears to be limited and possibly controlled by the State according to research by Peter Barber of the British Library. Few examples survive with contents dating prior to the issue of the Coats of Arms and one can see how detailed knowledge of the country could provide sensitive material to its neighbours, most particularly at the time to Spain. Of the 47 examples examined in detail in Appendix 10 of Evans & Lawrence 16 were wanting the Coats of Arms. This indicates that the majority of examples were not available until after this plate was available, c.1590. This is also interestingly after Saxton’s 10 year privilege expired in 1587. It is believed that this final stage was at the hand of Augustine Ryther who was originally the engraver of five of the plates.
Provenance: Bornem Convent, just south of Antwerp, inscription on verso of index leaf, this was a convent of English speaking friars and now survives as St. Bernard’s Abbey; Henry Cunliffe Armiger (1826-1894), bookplate; and thence by descent. Indeed it appears as is the Cunliffe family are related to the Earl’s of Rutland. In 1806 the co-heirs of the Barony of Roos, one of the titles of the Earl of Rutland, were stated in the ‘Gentleman’s Magazine’ as being Sir. H. Cunliffe, the Earl of Essex and Lady H. Fitzgerald. Barber ‘Mapmaking in England, ca. 1470-1650’ in The History of Cartography volume 3 part 2 pp. 1623-31; Chubb 1; Evans & Lawrence pp. 9–43; Harley The Map Collector no. 8 pp. 2-11; Hind vol. 1 p. 73, (plts. 38-9 illustrate the two states of the title page portrait); Hodson Herts 1.1; Lawrence ‘Christopher Saxton’ in The Map Collector 27 pp. 16-18; Schilder Monumenta Cartographica Neerlandica, vol. 8. pp. 109-13 figs. 8.5, 8.8-8.10; Shirley ‘Atlases in the British Library’, T.Sax 1b-e; Skelton 1; Shirley ‘Netherlanders in Elizabethan England’, in ‘Mappae Antiquae Liber Amicorum Gunter Schilder’ pp.187-202; Tyacke & Huddy ‘Christopher Saxton and Tudor map-making’.
[An Atlas of England and Wales]
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