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  • EUR 17,83

    EUR 18,41 Versand
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    Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

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    folio [33x21cm]. disbound and secured with a plastic spine binder. pp67. good clean condition. [please see our storefront page for shipping information].

  • CUSTOM HOUSE, LEITH, EDINBURGH - an Original, Antique Hand-Coloured Engraving

    Sprache: Englisch

    Erscheinungsdatum: 1860

    Anbieter: K Books Ltd ABA ILAB, York, YORKS, Vereinigtes Königreich

    Verbandsmitglied: ABA ILAB PBFA

    Verkäuferbewertung 5 von 5 Sternen 5 Sterne, Erfahren Sie mehr über Verkäufer-Bewertungen

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    EUR 29,72

    EUR 22,51 Versand
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    No Binding. Zustand: Very Good. An original antique hand-coloured engraving, colouring not contemporary but delicately and expertly executed. Mounted (matted) and ready to frame. Printed 1860. Shows the Custom House, Leith near Edinburgh.

  • Bild des Verkäufers für To the Right Honourable The Lord Provost Magistrates. and Council of the City of Edinburgh this Plan of the Old and new Town of Edinburgh and Leith With the Proposed Docks is Most Humbly Inscribed by Their Obedient Servant John Ainslie Land-Surveyor. zum Verkauf von Geographicus Rare Antique Maps

    EUR 1.987,76

    EUR 14,65 Versand
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    Good. Mounted on linen. Exhibits areas of loss and infill in the upper left and right corners, including in the reference table for Leith. Tight margins. Size 44.75 x 31 Inches. This is a significant 1804 John Ainslie city plan or map of Edinburgh and Leith, Scotland - prepared on the cusp of the major Second New Town Expansion. A Closer Look The map depicts Edinburgh from the Firth of Forth south to The Meadows, offering striking detail in both the Old Town and New Town. Edinburgh Castle, Carlton Hill, and the North Loch are prominently illustrated, with the grid structure of New Town striking against the Old Town warren. Georges Street, Queen Street, and Princes Street are prominently labeled, along with Charlotte Square and St. Andrew's Square. Tracts of land owned by the Trader's Hospital, Heriots Hospital, Trinity Hospital, and innumerable private landowners are illustrated, labeled, and outlined. Old Town and New Town The settlement of Edinburgh developed around a medieval stronghold, achieving a royal charter in the 12th century. Edinburgh became Scotland's capital in the mid-14th century. The Old Town is the medieval part of the city and has maintained its street plan and Reformation-era buildings to the present day. Nonetheless, by the mid-18th century, Edinburgh had gained a reputation as a 'dirty' city where the bubonic plague, cholera, and typhus were daily hazards. The city was also overcrowded, with visitors shocked by the tight quarters. In 1766, the architect James Craig, then 26 years old, won a design competition for the creation of a new settlement, forever to be known as New Town. Craig's plan employed a grid layout, public gardens, and other Enlightenment urban planning innovations. The new neighborhood's street names honored King George and his family and were meant to celebrate the Union between Scotland and England. North Loch was drained (although that took until the 1820s), and Edinburgh's wealthy moved to the elegant streets of New Town. The Second New Town Begun around the time this map was published, Northern or Second New Town, extended the city north of Queen Street. This development, completed in 1830, expanded on Craig's popular grid design. Publication History and Census This map was created and published by John Ainslie in 1804. Extremely rare. A single other known example is cataloged in OCLC as part of the institutional collection at the British Library. References: OCLC 890397078.

  • 1869 Johnston City Plan or Map of Edinburgh and Leith, Scotland

    Erscheinungsdatum: 1869

    Anbieter: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, USA

    Verbandsmitglied: ABAA ESA ILAB

    Verkäuferbewertung 3 von 5 Sternen 3 Sterne, Erfahren Sie mehr über Verkäufer-Bewertungen

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    Karte

    EUR 1.987,76

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    Good. Even overall toning. Wear and slight damage where originally attached to binder. Map sectionalized in two panels which can be joined (with linen) on request. Size 68.25 x 53.75 Inches. This 1869 Johnston city plan or map of Edinburgh and Leith, Scotland, presents an impressively detailed overview of the city during an era of rapid industrial expansion. For more than 30 years, this map was the finest available map of Edinburgh, used for urban planning, city administration, trade, infrastructure development, and more. Shipyards, mills, factories, breweries, foundries, and ironworks, many of which are labeled, fuel an economic boom. The city's railways and stations are illustrated in detail. Central Edinburgh's iconic grid, designed by James Craig in 1768, stands in contrast to the maze of streets and lanes that create the rest of the city. As a historical aside, 1869 was also the year the 'Edinburgh Seven,' the first group of female students to enroll in a British university, began attending the University of Edinburgh Medical School, although they were not allowed to take degrees. Manuscript Notations Upon close examination, it becomes evident that this example of Johnston's map bears numerous manuscript notations. For example, along the left border, a new railway is sketched in pencil, running from the Heriot Brewery toward the existing rail line. A road is added here. More manuscript notations appear in the lower-left corner, many of which appear to plan out roadways and properties to be established in this area. Unfortunately, precisely what is being planned is unclear. Three different colors, blue, pink, and yellow, are present in manuscript and are used to highlight several areas around Edinburgh, but, alas, we have also been unable to decipher the meaning of this work. Manuscript Notations and The Merchant Maiden Hospital and Gillespie's Hospital Two Edinburgh landmarks, the Merchant Maiden Hospital and Gillespie's Hospital, are crossed out in manuscript. Both were charitable organizations, but only one was a hospital. Gillespie's Hospital was founded by the James Gillespie (1726 - 1797) and the Merchant's Company of Edinburgh in 1801 as a hospital for aged men and women. The Merchant Maiden Hospital was not a hospital but a home for women who had fallen on hard times. Opened on June 4, 1694, the hospital was co-founded by Mary Erskine (1627 - July 2, 1707) and the Merchant Company of Edinburgh to house and educate the impoverished daughters of Edinburgh's failed merchants. Both Gillespie's Hospital and the Merchant Maiden Hospital were closed and repurposed as schools in 1870, which likely explains why they are crossed out here. The buildings still stood, but the organizations labeled on the map no longer existed. Intriguingly, Watson's Hospital, depicted just above the Merchant Maiden Hospital, was closed in much the same way around the same time and reopened as a boy's school in 1871. However, unlike the other two institutions, it is not crossed out. A Note Concerning Provenance - The Merchant Company of Edinburgh Library A red binder bearing the stamp of the Merchant Company of Edinburgh accompanies this piece, suggesting that it was once part of their library. Officially known as The Royal Company of Merchants of the City of Edinburgh, the Merchant Company of Edinburgh received a Royal Charter in 1681, but dates to at least 1260. Begun as a merchant guild founded to protect the trading rights of Edinburgh's merchants, the Company also undertakes educational and charitable missions. To become a member, one must be elected by the Master's Court and either reside or operate a business in Edinburgh or within twenty miles of General Register House in Edinburgh. Publication History and Census This map was created and published by William and Alexander Keith Johnston in 1869 and is accompanied by a red binder. Johnston published editions of his plan of Edinburgh beginning in the 1850s through the 1890s. One example of.