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London in 1746, impressive wall map
A plan of the cities of London and Westminster, and borough of Southwark
Full size 1971 Harry Margary edition of the celebrated map by John Rocque. 24 framed sheets.
The idea to do a new survey had come from the engraver George Vertue, but he and John Rocque could not come to an agreement. Rocque, began the painstaking project in 1737 in partnership with another engraver, John Pine, to survey the central area of London and Westminster, which eventually took 9 years.
The completed map measured 6 ½ feet by 13 and comprised of 24 separate sheets. It encompassed an area of 10,000 acres and drawn at a scale of 200ft to the 1inch.
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Due to the huge size of this map there is a low survival rate for the original examples so a full-size facsimile was produced in 1971 by Harry Margary.
Harry Margary, a Senior Civil Scientific Engineer for the Admiralty and self-professed inventor, produced this full-size facsimile of the famous John Rocque map in 1971. The original 18th century map never joined properly due to paper shrinkage in the printing process and only the constituent copper plates joined. For this lithographically printed version Margary altered some of the edges so the maps would join and significantly cleaned up the image area.
Interest in Rocque’s map has increased over the years and in 2014 an original complete example, sold at auction for £85,000
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