Rare Maps and Prints
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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
Ravenhill studies the history of the manuscript which was acquired by Benjamin Cowse in 1720. Shortly after he was persuaded to part with the accompanying manuscript maps to Roger Gale. He was a bookseller at the Globe in Paternoster Row active from 1714-44. By 1726 Cowse had sold the manuscript text to his “friend and associate” Christopher Bateman for £20 (Ravenhill). Bateman was similarly a bookseller at the Bible & Crown in Paternoster Row. He hoped to redeem his business by publishing the manuscript. Gale was happy to loan the manuscript maps which had been removed, so that they may be engraved for the intended work. This engraving was undertaken by John Pine (1690?-1756), and is one of his earlier works.
Four examples were printed on vellum, one for his patron, the Earl of Oxford, another for Dr. Richard Rawlinson. Indeed, it was Rawlinson who penned the four page ‘Some Account of the Author, by the Editor’. The plate of ‘St. Germans in Cornwall’ is duly dedicated to him. In this example it found bound as is often the case opposite page 93 and the alphabetical description of the location. One of four examples of this work printed on vellum was sold by Christie’s in 2002 for £11,950. It came from the library of Beriah Botfield at Longleat.
Ravenhill goes on to speculate that Bateman “arranged for a set of the engraved maps to be coloured with hues similar to those on the original maps”. That example went to the library of Lord Oxford from where it was transferred to the Harleian Collection at the British Museum, now British Library. He goes on to state that about 200 copies were printed. This is a desirable example in early colour; indeed no example could be found on Rare Book Hub having appeared in auction.
The manuscript, originally presented to James I, survives in the Department of Manuscripts at the British Library (Harl. MS 6252). In 1971 it was reported that the 14 manuscript maps to accompany the text had been rediscovered at Trinity College, Cambridge (MS. 0.4.19). Provenance: Blackwells Bookshop; private English collection; Clive A. Burden Ltd. Catalogue IX (2012) item 68; private English collection. ESTC T127847; Globe (1985) p. 98; ‘Imago Mundi’ no. 25 p. 100 Chronicle; Lowndes (1864) p. 1698; Quixley (2018) 6; Ravenhill (1972); Shirley (2004) T.Nord 1a & 1b; Upcott (1968) I p. 78; Worms & Baynton-Williams (2011).