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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
Hollar (1607-77) is described by Pennington in glowing terms: ‘Of all etchers, Hollar is certainly the most varied in subject, one of the most accomplished in technique, and with a style that is full of a charm, a humour, and a good nature that are evidently the character of the man himself’. He was born in Prague and made his way to England in the party of Lord Arundel arriving in London in late December 1636. By 1644 Hollar had already done some work for Jenner which included working on at least two of the re-engraved plates for the ‘Direction for the English Traviller’ published in 1643.
The published history of the Quartermaster’s Map is long and complicated extending to 1824. Its earliest form is considered that which bears the date 1644 on the title. This was revised for the second edition in 1671. The plates were then acquired by John Garrett (fl.1676-1718) who issued the third and fourth editions. It is last known in Garrett’s hands in his catalogue of 1718, the year of his death. Its whereabouts after that is not known for sure but according to Tyacke his business was taken over by Thomas Glass (‘Daily Post’ 4 August 1720) at the Royal Exchange. He appears to have flourished from 1720 to 1750, the earliest and latest references found to him. He was succeeded by Philip Glass who appears to have sold the plates to John Rocque. Jean Rocque (c.1704-62), to use his native name, was a Huguenot émigré who with his family settled in England by about 1709. By 1734 he was a surveyor, engraver and publisher and worked first in the region of Soho, a known centre for French emigrants. Rocque’s importance to map making in the eighteenth century should never be underestimated. For this edition the bibliographers note a few alterations were made to the plates. Amongst these is the addition of a French title to sheet 5 dated 1752 bearing Rocque’s imprint. On this sheet also lines radiation from the compass rose are inserted, but not on any other sheet. The small engraved title still bearing Garrett’s imprint is reworded slightly.
There are however two notable differences to this issue. The first sheet bears many new names including ‘RENFREW’ and ‘LIDISDALE’ along with the administrative boundaries of Scotland reflecting the Rebellion of 1745. But this issue is also supposed to contain the ‘Picts Wall’ or Hadrian’s Wall, but doesn’t. It also lacks a new sheet produced including a title ‘A New Mapp of Eng-Land. called ye Quarter-masters Map’ intended to be cut and added to the top plate of the map. In 1745 Bonnie Prince Charlie began a rebellion in Scotland and crossed the line of Hadrian’s Wall to conquer Carlisle. He was eventually defeated the following year and forced to withdraw. Interestingly from our perspective, in the early 1750s a military road was built along the line of Hadrian’s Wall from Newcastle to Carlisle. It was seen by many at the time as a reincarnation of the Roman Wall. We therefore conjecture that c.1750-51 Rocque acquired the plates to the Quartermaster map and made some immediate changes cited above. It was not until the early 1750s that the new military road was constructed and its significance was such that Rocque added it to the plate. The issue we offer here was therefore only available for a short period of time. Current study identifies only two known examples of this issue, both uncoloured (Bodleian Allen 3437, 2 private American collection, private English collection). Provenance: manuscript ownership to the title partially trimmed ‘… York’; Sotheby’s 30 July 1985 lot 972; private English collection. Harley & Skelton (1972); Pennington (1982) 652-7; Shirley (1991) no. 537; Tooley (1999-2004); Tyacke (1978) p. 11-16.
The Kingdome of England, & Principality of Wales, Exactly Described Whi=th every Sheere, & the small townes in every one of them, in Six Mappes, Portable for every Mans Pocket ...
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