
BRITISH ISLES (C.1760): 8xCards
Text on the reverse side: Published in Histoire Universelle around 1760, the copper engraving by Borde depicts the British Isles. The term Britain ...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Published in Histoire Universelle around 1760, the copper engraving by Borde depicts the British Isles. The term Britain ...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: A double hemisphere hand coloured map of the world, Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Geographica by Pierre-Jean Mariette (1603-...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Map of London from an actual survey made between 1824-1826 by Christopher and John Greenwood. The city was the first to r...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Image from an eighteenth century copperplate depiction of London, published by J.Cooke, London, in 1776. as it was befor...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Published 1892 onwards, these beautiful maps were sold at one penny per copy by a specialist in gentlemen’s tailoring and...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Engraved by J.Cleghorn, the map was published in 1837 as a part of Thomas Moule's English Counties. Steel engraved by J.C...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Engraved by J.Roper based on a plan by G.Cole, this copperplate printed mat was published in The Beauties of England &...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: By the cartographer William Maitland, the map was published as part of “The History and Survey of London”. This map shows...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain by the famous English cartographer John Speed (1552-1629). First published in ...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain by the famous English cartographer John Speed (1552-1629). First published in ...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Published under the superintendence of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, this map is a view of “Antwerp ...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Titled ‘Antverpia; Gallis Anvers. Vernacule Antwerpen.”, the map is by the Dutch cartographer, Joan Blaeu (1596-1673). Th...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: A Ground Plott of Canterbury by Wenceslas Hollar, which was originally published around 1670. The copper plate engraving ...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: The antique map of the county of Gloucestershire, as part of "A Topographical Dictionary of England with Historical and S...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: This antique map of Gloucestershire by Thomas Moule (1784 – 1851), contains vignettes of Gloucester Cathedral, Tewkesbury...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain by the famous English cartographer John Speed (1552-1629). It reads: "Gloucest...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: A map of Ireland published as part of the Atlas Major. Today, 80 million people of Irish descent are estimated to live ou...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Produced in London by Richard Brookes, the celestial map shows the constellations in the northern and southern hemisphere...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: Titled "Brightstowe, vulgo" was published in Cologne in 1588 in the book Civitates Orbis Terrarum (Towns of the World). T...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: France, including the islands of French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Mayotte, and Réunion Island, is the largest count...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: The county of Gloucestershire is home to Gloucester Cathedral which has the Crecy Window which is the biggest stained-gla...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: A map depicting Elizabethan London, which was a centre of entertainment and leisure activities. Inn-yards and the new the...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: A map of Durham published in Picturesque Views of the Antiquities of England & Wales, 1786. The entire centre of Durh...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: A map of Durham from the publication The Beauties of England & Wales, 1806. The present city of Durham can be traced ...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: A map of Scotland with inset map of the Shetland Islands, published in 1851, containing illustrations of local sites and ...
View full detailsText on the reverse side: View of Paris published c.1660 by Martin Zeiller. The city was founded in the 3rd century BC by Celtic people called the ...
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