C1870

Sketch Map Showing the Minerals & Silk Distric…

Rare detailed c.19th hand coloured map of Shadong province by J. Markham who was the consul at Chefoo. He travelled through the province in 1869 recording the mines, the silk areas and places where mulberry trees grew. He provided new … Read Full Description

$A 325

In stock

S/N: RGS-1870-ASI-CHI–228253
(C017)
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Details

Full Title:

Sketch Map Showing the Minerals & Silk Distric…

Date:

C1870

Condition:

Upper section of right margin trimmed as usual, otherwise in good condition, with folds as issued.

Technique:

Copper engraving with original hand colouring

Image Size: 

370mm 
x 245mm

Paper Size: 

393mm 
x 279mm
AUTHENTICITY
Sketch Map Showing the Minerals & Silk Districts of the Province of Shan-tung (China). - Antique Map from 1870

Genuine antique
dated:

1870

Description:

Rare detailed c.19th hand coloured map of Shadong province by J. Markham who was the consul at Chefoo. He travelled through the province in 1869 recording the mines, the silk areas and places where mulberry trees grew. He provided new and interesting information and the life of the Chinese.

Edward Weller (1819 - 1884)

Distinguished British cartographer, engraver, and publisher whose work contributed significantly to the popular dissemination of geographic knowledge in the mid to late c.19th. Active during a period of rapid expansion in global exploration and imperial cartography, Weller became one of the foremost mapmakers associated with The Weekly Dispatch Atlas and later the London Atlas of Universal Geography, works that brought high-quality maps to a broad middle-class readership.

Born in London in 1819, Weller trained as a draughtsman and engraver in an era when advances in lithography and steel-plate engraving were transforming the mapmaking industry. By the 1840s, he had established himself at 34 Red Lion Square, Holborn, where he operated as an engraver, draughtsman, and publisher. His early work included finely engraved maps for a variety of publishers and periodicals, but he rose to prominence through his long association with the publisher Cassell, Petter & Galpin.

Edward Weller’s contributions helped standardise mid-Victorian cartographic design and facilitated public engagement with geography through affordable, well-made maps. He remained active in London until his death in 1884. His output represents a bridge between the artisanal engraving traditions of the early nineteenth century and the industrial lithographic production that came to dominate the later Victorian period.

View other items by Edward Weller

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