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
Norden’s maps were pioneering, he introduced the graticule or grid system to maps with reference numbers and letters in the margins. This was to enable the location of places. In this map of Hampshire, a list of the 40 Hundreds of the county is found on the left side with below a note on the scale which “goeth rounde about the mapp”. An explanation sits beside it with the arms of the Marquis of Winchester and the Earl of Southampton on the right side. His surveying was considered superior to that of Saxton and as such was the preferred source by the likes of John Speed, William Hole and William Kip.
Stent (fl.1642-65) died from the plague 29 September 1665, which was raging in London that year and which before it was done would claim 20% of its population. He bequeathed his estate to his wife Susanna, who shortly after sold it to John Overton (1640-1713) the printseller. Stent’s stock was arguably the largest collection of prints on the market at the time. Amongst this he found twelve copper plates of the English counties by William Smith. These formed the nucleus of a set of maps of the English Counties. Those counties which Overton could not provide from his own stock were supplied by the acquired maps of Speed, Blaeu or Jansson. These county atlases were an English version of a rich seam of similar Dutch composite atlases published from the mid-seventeenth century. They are exceedingly rare SURVIVING IN JUST FOUR KNOWN EXAMPLES, none complete. Later atlases sold by his son Henry are similarly rare, only seven survive. This is an example of the third state of the map which judging by the large margins and colour was published by Overton’s son Henry in who sold it separately and placed them in his composite atlases. Baynton-Williams (2006) ‘John Overton (1640-1713)’ in ‘Map Forum’ no. 9 pp. 18-24; Globe (1985) p. 98 & no. 344; Hind (1952) I pp. 195-202; Hodson (1984) p. 61; Rodger (1972) 163; Shirley (2004) T.OVE 3a, no. 14; refer Skelton (1970) 89; Worms & Baynton-Williams (2011).