Clive A. Burden LTD. Rare Maps, Antique Atlases, Books and Decorative Prints

The Mapping of North America

Mr. Philip D. Burden​
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William Smith (1546-1618) was an antiquary and an officer of the College of Arms. The twelve maps of William Smith were for years known famously as those of the ANONYMOUS map maker. Although ten of them are derived from those of Christopher Saxton and two from John Norden they are no mere slavish copies. Smith sought local knowledge to improve on earlier works much of which was incorporated into his maps. One such correspondent called William Burton provides the only firm evidence we have that the engraver of the plates was Jodocus Hondius. In 1958 the British Museum acquired four manuscript maps from the Netherlands which provided the conclusive evidence of the authorship of William Smith. These were of Cheshire, Hertfordshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire. The name of Hans Woutneel, a Dutch bookseller in London, can be found in connection with two of the maps, but only on one engraved, that of Essex dated 1602. His departure might have led to the demise of the project. It is also feasible that Hondius’ departure to work on the copper plates for the atlas of John Speed might have been the cause. The maps of William Smith beautifully engraved by Hondius remain one of the most desirable of any English county maps. Those in the first state are virtually unobtainable.

Peter Stent died from the plague 29 September 1665 and bequeathed his estate to his wife Susanna, shortly after it was sold to John Overton 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. The third state of the map, published by John Overton who sold it separately and placed them in his composite atlases. This is one of only two in the series derived from a printed map by John Norden complete with his roads although here engraved on a larger scale. Provenance: private English collection. Hodson (1984-97) 142; Skelton (1970) p. 21 & nos. 3 & 89.
SMITH, William – OVERTON, John

Surriae Comitatus Continens in Seoppida Mercatoria VII Ecclesias Parochiales CXL

London, c.1603-[c.1670]
380 x 480 mm., with modern outline colour, wash colour to the cartouches and wooded areas, in very good condition.
Stock number: 6073
£ 1,650
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