The Map trade in the late eighteenth century

<br/>This collection of eighty-nine letters written by Parisian and other European map publishers to the London map firm of Jefferys &amp; Faden represents one of the few business archives left to us from the eighteenth-century map trade. Thomas Jeffreys (c.1720-1771) and William Faden (17...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Pedley, M
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Voltaire Foundation 2017
_version_ 1826305214544609280
author2 Pedley, M
author_facet Pedley, M
collection OXFORD
description <br/>This collection of eighty-nine letters written by Parisian and other European map publishers to the London map firm of Jefferys &amp; Faden represents one of the few business archives left to us from the eighteenth-century map trade. Thomas Jeffreys (c.1720-1771) and William Faden (1749-1836) both enjoyed the title of ‘Geographer to the King of England’ and were well respected by other geographers of the period. Like many of his contemporaries in the map trade, Jefferys had difficulty making a financial success of his map business; his successor Faden, by contrast, was able to expand the firm into a flourishing business which continued well into the nineteenth century. Their correspondents included important European map and print publishers such as Covens &amp; Mortier in Amsterdam and Lattré, Julien and Desnos in Paris, as well as the French geographers d’Anville and Robert de Vaugondy. Other persons mentioned in the correspondence provide links between Faden’s London firm and the Dépôt de la Marine, the French Navy’s cartographic department, an important connection in the tumultuous decade of 1773-1783 when England found itself at war with France in North America, in the English Channel, and in India. <br/> The letters also provide a detailed view of the costs of doing business – prices, discount, payment, schedules and methods, shipping costs and arrangements- in the last quarter of the eighteenth century and further increase our knowledge of the economics of map production and sales in this period. <br/> The letters are now in the Manuscript Division of the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan. In this edition they have been transcribed and fully annotated and are preceded by an introduction placing the correspondence in the context of the print and book trade and the rôle of cartography in eighteenth-century politics. <br/> <br/> Illustrations <br/> Preface<br/> Note to this edition <br/> Abbreviations<br/> Introduction<br/> I Foreign Correspondence, miscellaneous, 1773-1783<br/> II Correspondence, Lamers, 1781, 1782 &amp; 1783 <br/> Work cited <br/> Index <br/>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:29:30Z
format Book
id oxford-uuid:f57ca2d9-f4ab-4883-9471-d80cea88381c
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:29:30Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Voltaire Foundation
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:f57ca2d9-f4ab-4883-9471-d80cea88381c2022-03-27T12:27:39ZThe Map trade in the late eighteenth centuryBookhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2f33uuid:f57ca2d9-f4ab-4883-9471-d80cea88381cEnglishVoltaire FoundationVoltaire Foundation2017Pedley, M<br/>This collection of eighty-nine letters written by Parisian and other European map publishers to the London map firm of Jefferys &amp; Faden represents one of the few business archives left to us from the eighteenth-century map trade. Thomas Jeffreys (c.1720-1771) and William Faden (1749-1836) both enjoyed the title of ‘Geographer to the King of England’ and were well respected by other geographers of the period. Like many of his contemporaries in the map trade, Jefferys had difficulty making a financial success of his map business; his successor Faden, by contrast, was able to expand the firm into a flourishing business which continued well into the nineteenth century. Their correspondents included important European map and print publishers such as Covens &amp; Mortier in Amsterdam and Lattré, Julien and Desnos in Paris, as well as the French geographers d’Anville and Robert de Vaugondy. Other persons mentioned in the correspondence provide links between Faden’s London firm and the Dépôt de la Marine, the French Navy’s cartographic department, an important connection in the tumultuous decade of 1773-1783 when England found itself at war with France in North America, in the English Channel, and in India. <br/> The letters also provide a detailed view of the costs of doing business – prices, discount, payment, schedules and methods, shipping costs and arrangements- in the last quarter of the eighteenth century and further increase our knowledge of the economics of map production and sales in this period. <br/> The letters are now in the Manuscript Division of the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan. In this edition they have been transcribed and fully annotated and are preceded by an introduction placing the correspondence in the context of the print and book trade and the rôle of cartography in eighteenth-century politics. <br/> <br/> Illustrations <br/> Preface<br/> Note to this edition <br/> Abbreviations<br/> Introduction<br/> I Foreign Correspondence, miscellaneous, 1773-1783<br/> II Correspondence, Lamers, 1781, 1782 &amp; 1783 <br/> Work cited <br/> Index <br/>
spellingShingle The Map trade in the late eighteenth century
title The Map trade in the late eighteenth century
title_full The Map trade in the late eighteenth century
title_fullStr The Map trade in the late eighteenth century
title_full_unstemmed The Map trade in the late eighteenth century
title_short The Map trade in the late eighteenth century
title_sort map trade in the late eighteenth century