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Stock# 93873
Description

The Largest Extra Illustrated Arrowsmith London Atlas

The present example includes 113 maps on 120 sheets, of which all but 1 were published by John Arrowsmith (the map of Mauritius having been engraved in Edinburgh by W.H. Lizars).

Examples of the London Atlas with a title page dated after 1842 are extremely rare. Most later examples have a title page date of 1842, with a list of 50 maps, often supplemented by additional maps. Extra illustrated examples tend to have 12 to 17 extra maps.  The Oxford catalog entry for the atlas in OCLC suggests an example of up to 70 maps, but the largest example we located in the example in the British Library with 68 maps.

The Mauritius map by Lizars is quite rare, and may be a unique survival.  The full title is:

To Lieut Genl. The Honble Sir Charles Colville G.C.B.  G.C.H.  K.C.T. & S. &c. &c. &c. Late Governor and Commander in Chief of Mauritius and Its Dependencies This Map is by Permission most respectfully Dedicated by his much Obliged and most Obedient Servant F.A. MacKenzie Fraser Major H.P. Unattached Sometime Milty Secy afterwards Acting Dy. Adjt. Genl in that Island 1835.

OCLC locates the following examples published after 1849:

  • British Library, 1858 (65 maps)
  • Sothebys offered an example dated 1858, with maps as late as 1864 (2019, L19405-123) with 62 maps

List of Maps

  1. World, as known to the Ancients (Orbis Veteribus Notus)
  2. World, on Mercator's Projection, with supplementary maps of the two Poles, drawn on the Polar Projection
  3. world on Mercator projection
  4. same
  5. Europe, general map
  6. England & Wales, divided into Counties
  7. Geology of England & Wales
  8. Railways England and Wales
  9. same
  10. Scotland
  11. Railways in Scotland
  12. Ireland
  13. Railways in Ireland
  14. Sweden & Norway
  15. Denmark, with a supplemental map of Iceland
  16. Holland & Belgium, including Luxembourg & country to the East as far as the Rhine
  17. France, in Departments, with a supplementary map divided into Provinces, & the I. of Corsica
  18. Western Germany, comprehending the country to the East, as far as the Meridian of Salzburg, Prague, Dresden & Stettin
  19. Prussia & Poland, excepting the Prussian Provinces on the Rhine, which are included in Plate 12
  20. Russia, including Poland & Finland
  21. Acquisitions of Russia
  22. Crimea
  23. South Crimea
  24. Austrian Empire, excepting a portion on the Italian side, West of the Meridian of Trieste, & the South portion of Dalmatia, the former included in Pl. 17 & the latter in Pl. 19)
  25. Switzerland, showing the Passes of the Alps from the Briancon on the S.W. to Glurns on the N.E. including the whole of Savoy, the Val Tellina, the Vorarlberg, and nearby the whole of Lombardy & Piedmont
  26. North Italy, including Sardinia, Piedmont, Switzerland, the States of the Austrian Empire, to the West of the Meridian of Fuane; & the Chains and Passes of the Alps & Apennines
  27. South Italy, including Sicily & the Maltese Islands
  28. Turkey in Europe, including the Archipelago, Greece, the Ionian Islands & the South part of Dalmatia
  29. Greece & the Ionian Islands
  30. Ionian Islands and Malta
  31. Spain & Portugal
  32. Africa, general map
  33. North-western Africa
  34. West Africa 
  35. same
  36. Slave Trade
  37. Cape of Good Hope & South Africa
  38. Kafirland
  39. South Eastern Africa
  40. Natal
  41. Madagascar
  42. Mauritius
  43. Nubia & Abyssinia, including Darfur, Kordofan & part of Arabia
  44. Egypt, including the Peninsula of Mount Sinai
  45. Asia, general map
  46. Asia Minor
  47. Turkey in Asia
  48. Peria, Cabul, Beloochistan, also Khiva, Bokhara, Kokan, Kashgar, the Punjab &c. in Central Asia
  49. Khiva
  50. India or Hindoostan
  51. Ceylon
  52. Punjab
  53. Cutchee
  54. Burmah 
  55. same
  56. Burmah & Adjacent Countries
  57. Burmah, Siam, & Cochin China, including the greater part of the Malaysian Peninsula
  58. China, proper
  59. Northern Asia, including Siberia, Kamtschatka, Japan, Mantchooria, Mongolia, Tehoongaria, Tibet, and the Himalaya Mountains
  60. Asiatic Archipelago, including on the North Canton, on the Eat, the Ladrone Islands, on the South, the N. Coast of New Holland, & on the W. Sumatra & Malay
  61. Australia 
  62. same
  63. River Glenelg.
  64. Northwest Coast of Asia
  65. Port Gregory
  66. Western Australia
  67. Cockburn Sound
  68. South-Eastern Australia
  69. Province of Victoria
  70. Mount Alexander
  71. Melbourne & River Glenegl.
  72. South Australia / Maritime Part
  73. South Australia / counties
  74. South Australia / special surveys
  75. Port Adelaide
  76. District of Adalaide
  77. South Adalaide
  78. Environs of Auckland
  79. New Zealand
  80. Norfolk
  81. Sandwich Islands
  82. Van Diemen's Land
  83. Pacific Ocean
  84. America, general map
  85. British North America, including Russian N. America & portions of Greenland, Mexico, & the United States
  86. British North America / Hudson's Bay 
  87. British Columbia
  88. North Pole
  89. Arctic Regions
  90. Arctic Shores of America
  91. Rae's Discoveries
  92. Rae's Arctic Shores of America
  93. Vancouver Island
  94. South Eastern Portion of Vancouver Island
  95. same
  96. Victoria & Esquimault Districts
  97. Town of Victoria
  98. Upper Canada &c., including that part of the United States to the N. of the parallel of Philadelphia
  99. Lower Canada &c., including New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, & and a large portion of the United States
  100. Eastern Townships of Lower Canada 
  101. same
  102. Newfoundland
  103. United States, marking the Canals and Rail Roads
  104. Mexico, including part of the United States territory
  105. Texas
  106. West Indies & Guatimala, showing the Colonies in possession of the various European Powers
  107. Isthmus of Darien
  108. Bahama Islands
  109.  Jamaica
  110. Leeward Islands
  111. Windward Islands
  112. Trinidad
  113. South America, general map
  114. Colombia, comprising the Republics of Venezuela, New Grenada, & Equator, as well as British Guyana
  115. British Guiana
  116. Peru & Bolivia
  117. Brazil, including the Banda Oriental
  118. La Plata & Chile, including Paraguay & the Banda Oriental
  119. Falkland Islands
  120. Registration Districts of the Metropolis
John Arrowsmith Biography

The Arrowsmiths were a cartographic dynasty which operated from the late-eighteenth century to the mid-nineteenth. The family business was founded by Aaron Arrowsmith (1750-1823), who was renowned for carefully prepared and meticulously updated maps, globes, and charts. He created many maps that covered multiple sheets and which were massive in total size. His spare yet exacting style was recognized around the world and mapmakers from other countries, especially the young country of the United States, sought his maps and charts as exemplars for their own work.

Aaron Arrowsmith was born in County Durham in 1750. He came to London for work around 1770, where he found employment as a surveyor for the city’s mapmakers. By 1790, he had set up his own shop which specialized in general charts. Arrowsmith had five premises in his career, most of which were located on or near Soho Square, a neighborhood the led him to rub shoulders with the likes of Joseph Banks, the naturalist, and Matthew Flinders, the hydrographer.

Through his business ties and employment at the Hydrographic Office, Arrowsmith made other important relationships with Alexander Dalrymple, the Hudson’s Bay Company, and others entities. In 1810 he became Hydrographer to the Prince of Wales and, in 1820, Hydrographer to the King.

Aaron Arrowsmith died in 1823, whereby the business and title of Hydrographer to the King passed to his sons, Aaron and Samuel, and, later, his nephew, John. Aaron Jr. (1802-1854) was a founder member of the Royal Geographical Society (RGS) and left the family business in 1832; instead, he enrolled at Oxford to study to become a minister. Samuel (1805-1839) joined Aaron as a partner in the business and they traded together until Aaron left for the ministry. Samuel died at age 34 in 1839; his brother presided over his funeral. The remaining stock and copper plates were bought at auction by John Arrowsmith, their cousin.

John (1790-1873) operated his own independent business after his uncle, Aaron Arrowsmith Sr., died. After 1839, John moved into the Soho premises of his uncle and cousins. John enjoyed considerable recognition in the geography and exploration community. Like Aaron Jr., John was a founder member of the RGS and would serve as its unofficial cartographer for 43 years. Several geographical features in Australia and Canada are named after him. He carried the title Hydrographer to Queen Victoria. He died in 1873 and the majority of his stock was eventually bought by Edward Stanford, who co-founded Stanford’s map shop, which is still open in Covent Garden, London today.