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Map No. 4. United States (1853)
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Detailed single page historical steel engraved map of the Southern Mid Atlantic States published in 1853. This map depicts North Carolina, Virginia (Virginia and West Virginia), Maryland as well as the District of Columbia, and Delaware, and parts of South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. The map shows several geographic details on cities, towns, rivers, mountains, and islands. Along the bottom edge is written: Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1853 by Daniel Burgess & Co in the Clerks office of the Southern District of New York. States appearing on the Map: North Carolina, Virginia (Virginia and West Virginia), Maryland, Delaware, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, and Pennsylvania as well as the District of Columbia. Cities appearing on the Map: North Carolina: Smithville (Name changed to Southport in 1887), Beaufort, Kenansville, Onslow C. H. (?), S. Washington (Ghost Town), Wilmington, Whitesville (Whiteville), Elizabeth (Elizabethtown), Lumberton, Rockingham, Wadesboro, Columbia, Plymouth, Williamston, Washington, Newbern (New Bern), Trenton, Kingston (Kinston), Goldsboro, Snow Hill, Greenville, Tarboro, Nashville, Windsor, Clinton, Fayetteville, Smithfield, Raleigh, Chapel Hill, Carthage, Lawrenceville (Ghost Town soon after 1842), Pittsboro, Ashboro, Monroe, Albemarle, Concord, Charlotte, Dallas, Lincolnton, Salisbury, Statesville, Lexington, Mocksville, Lenoir, Morgantown (Morganton), Shelby, Rutherfordton, Burnsville, Hendersonville, Ashville (Asheville), Waynesville, Franklin, Murphy, Eliz. City (Elizabeth City), Hertford, Gatesville, Edenton, Winton, Jackson, Halifax, Gaston, Louisburg, Oxford, Warrentown (Warrenton), Roxboro, Hillsboro (Hillsborough), Greensboro, Yanceyville, Wentworth, Salem, Wilkesboro, Germanton, Rockford, and Jefferson. South Carolina: Marion, Cheraw, Camden, Columbia, Yorkville (Name changed to York in 1915), Laurensville (Name changed to Laurens in 1873), Greenville, Abbeville, and Anderson. Tennessee: Knoxville. Virginia (Virginia and West Virginia): Virginia: Norfolk, Suffolk, Portsmouth, Jerusalem (Name changed to Courtland in 1888), Hicksford (Merged in 1887 with Belfield and the name was changed to Emporia), Lawrenceville, Boydton Banister, Lewiston (Name changed to Lunenburg), Matinsville, Chatham, Rocky Mount, Taylorsville (Name changed to Stuart in 1884), Greenville (?), Hillsville, Jacksonville (Name was changed to Floyd in 1896), Wytheville, Marion, Abingdon, Lebanon, Estillville (Name changed to Gate City in 1890), Jonesville, Eastville, Drummond (Name changed to Accomac in 1893), Hampton, Williamsburg, York T. (Yorktown), Rappahannock (Tappahannock?), Heathsville, Petersburg, Richmond, Scotts V. (Name changed to Powhatan), Henderson V. (Hendersonville), Marys V. (Name changed to Charlotte Court House), Maysville (Name changed to Buckingham), Palmyra, Monticello, Lovington (Lovingston), Lynchburg, Liberty (Name changed to Bedford in 1890), Fincastle, Lexington, Covington, Christiansburg, Salem, Newbern, Parisburg (Pearisburg), Jeffersonville (Name changed to Tazewell), Bowling Green, Fredericksburg, Brentsville, Warrenton, Charlottesville, Faifax (Name changed to Culpeper in 1869), Harrisonburg, Luray, Woodstock, Front Royal, Staunton, Warm Springs, Leesburg, Berryville, and Winchester. West Virginia: Union, White Sulphur Spr. (White Sulphur Springs), Lewisburg, Princeton, Franklin, Beverly, Huntersville, Summerville (Summersville), Sutton, Glenville, Fayetteville, Charleston, Ripley, Trouts Hill (Name changed to Wayne in 1911), Barboursville, Guyandott (Now a neighborhood in Huntington), Point Pleasant, Charleston (Charles Town), Martinsburg, Harpers Ferry, Romney, Bath (Name changed to Berkeley Springs in 1861), Phillipi (Philippi), Pruntytown, Kingwood, Morgantown, Weston, Clarksburg, Fairmount (Fairmont), Middletown (Middlebourne), N. Martinsville (New Martinsville), Moundville (Moundsville), Harrisville, Parkersburg, Wellsburg, and Wheeling. Kentucky: Piketon (Name changed to Pikeville in 1850), Louisa, and Greenupsburg (Name changed to Greenup in 1872). Maryland: Snow Hill, Princess Ann (Princess Anne), Cambridge, Easton, Annapolis, Leonard (Leonardtown), Pr. Frederick (Prince Frederick), Up Marlboro (Upper Marlboro), Pt. Tobacco (Port Tobacco), Centre V. (Centreville), Chester T. (Chestertown), Havre de Grace, Belair (Bel Air), Baltimore, Westminster, Rockville, Frederick, Emmetsburg (Emmitsburg), Hagerstown, Hancock, and Cumberland. Delaware: George T. (Georgetown), Milford, Dover, Delaware City, New Castle, Newark, and Wilmington. District of Columbia (District of Columbia and Virginia): District of Columbia: Washington and Georgetown (Now a neighborhood in Washington since 1871). Virginia: Alexandria. Ohio: Portsmouth, Marietta, Zanesville, Chillicothe, Columbus, and Steubenville. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia, Columbia, York, Chambersburg, Harrisburg, Huntingdon, Hollidaysburg, Bedford, Pittsburg (Pittsburgh), and Beaver. Populations appearing on the Map: Smithville (Name changed to Southport in 1887): 1,500 Wilmington: 7,500 Plymouth: 1,000 Washington: 2,000 Newbern: 3,750 Kingston (Kinston): 250 Greenville: 2,000 Fayetteville: 1,500 Smithfield: 500 Raleigh: 4,000 Ashboro: 7,500 North Carolina: 869,000 Monroe: 250 Morgantown (Morganton): 250 Murphy: 250 Norfolk: 14,250 Portsmouth: 3,000 Edenton: 1,500 Oxford: 2,000 Petersburg: 14,000 Richmond: 27,500 Lynchburg: 8,000 Lexington: 1,750 George T. (Georgetown): 500 Milford: 2,250 Delaware: 92,000 Easton: 1,500 Annapolis: 3,000 Wasington: 40,000 Bowling Green: 500 Fredericksburg: 4,000 Alexandria: 8,750 Georgetown: 8,250 Front Royal: 500 Virginia (Virginia and West Virginia): 1,422,000 Charleston: 1,000 Dover: 4,500 Delaware City: 1,000 New Castle: 3,000 Wilmington: 14,000 Elkton: 1,250 Havre de Grace: 6,000 Baltimore: 169,000 Maryland: 583,000 Frederick: 6,000 Emmetsburg (Emmitsburg): 750 Hagerstown: 4,000 Leesburg: 1,500 Charleston (Charles Town): 1,500 Martinsburg: 2,250 Harpers Ferry: 1,750 Winchester: 3,500 N. Martinsville (New Martinsville): 250 Wheeling: 11,500
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Map No. 8. United States (1853)
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Detailed single page historical steel engraved map of the Eastern Midwestern States published in 1853. This map depicts Illinois, Missouri, and Iowa and parts of Kentucky, Arkansas, Indian Territory (Oklahoma), Kansas, Nebraska, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Indiana. The map shows several geographic details on cities, towns, rivers, mountains, and islands. Along the bottom edge is written: Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1853 by Daniel Burgess & Co in the Clerks office of the Southern District of New York. States appearing on the Map: llinois, Missouri, Iowa, Kentucky, Arkansas, Indian Territory (Oklahoma), Kansas, Nebraska, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Indiana. Cities appearing on the Map: Missouri: New Madrid, Bloomfield, Crane Creek (Cane Creek Township), Van Buren, Thomasville, Rock Bridge (Rockbridge), Forsyth, Cassville, Enterprise (No longer exists but was on the banks of Pattersons Creek in McDonald County), Neosho, Charleston, Benton, Jackson, Perryville, Greenville, Berford (?), Fredericktown, Farmington, Potosi, St. Genevieve (Ste. Genevieve), Eminence, Houston, Birchport (?), Hartville, Waynesville, Mt. Vernon (Mount Vernon), Springfield, Greenfield, Buffalo, Bolivar, Fremont (Name changed to Stockton in 1857), Carthage, Batesville (Ghost town after 1848), Herculaneum, Hillsboro, St. Louis, St. Charles, Steeleville (Steelville), Linn, Union, Herman (Hermann), Warrenton, Danville, Erie (Ghost town after 1855 when the county seat moved to Linn Creek), Tuscumbia, Versailles, Jefferson City, Fulton, Boonville, Columbia, Franklin, Oceola (Osceola), Warsaw, Clinton, Georgetown, Warrensburg, Harrisonville, Troy, Mexico, Bowling Green, New London, Hannibal, Palmyra, Marion City (Ghost town), Fayette, Glasgow, Paris, Huntsville, Keytesville, Shelbyville, Bloomington, Marshall, Lexington, Carrollton, Chillicothe, Linneus, Gallatin, Independence, Liberty, Richmond, Platte City, Plattsburg, Sparta (Ghost town after the county seat moved to St. Joseph in 1846), St. Joseph, Kingston, Savannah, Westport (Now a neighborhood in Kansas City since 1897), Oregon, Monticello, Waterloo, Edina, Hopkinsville (Kirksville), Memphis, Tippecanoe (Ghost town after the civil war), Trenton, Pharsalia (Name changed to Milan in 1859), Princeton, Sandsville (Ghost town before 1882), Bethpage (Bethany), and Lindon (Ghost town). Illinois: Metropolis City (Metropolis), Golconda, Elizabethtown, Shawneetown (Abandoned after the 1937 Flood of the Ohio River and now known as Old Shawneetown), Equality, Cairo, Caledonia (Ghost town since 1870), Union (Unity), Vienna, Jonesboro, Brownsville (Ghost town after fire burned the court house down in 1843), Marion, Kaskaskia, Mt. Carmel (Mount Carmel), Lawrenceville, Carmi, McLeansboro, Albion, Fairfield, Olney, Lewisville (Name changed to Louisville), Newton, Salem, Benton, Pinckney V. (Pinckneyville), Nashville, Mt. Vernon (Mount Vernon), Carlyle, Greenville, Waterloo, Belleville, Edwardsville, Alton, Grafton, Palestine, Marshall, Paris, Ewington (Ghost town after 1860 when the county seat moved), Shelbyville, Charleston, Sullivan, Vandalia, Hillsboro, Taylorsville (Taylorville), Decatur, Springfield, Gilead, Jerseyville, Carrollton, Carlinville, Pittsfield, Winchester, Jacksonville, Virginia, Mt. Sterling (Mount Sterling), Quincy, Danville, Middleport (Middleport Township), Monticello, Urbanna (Urbana), Pontiac, Petersburg, Postville (Ghost town after the county seat moved to Mt. Pulaski in 1848), Clinton, Bloomington, Tremont, Woodford, Peoria, Rushville, Havanna (Havana), Lewiston (Lewistown), Macomb, Monmouth, Knoxville, Carthage, Nauvoo, Oquawka, Chicago, Morris, Ottawa, Joliet, Yorkville, Napiersville (Naperville), Syracuse (Sycamore), Batavia, Toulon, Lacon, Hennepin, Princeton, Dixon, Oregon City (Name changed to Oregon in 1843), Cambridge, Rock Island, Lyndon, Waukegon (Waukegan), Dorr (Dorr Township), Belvidere, Rockford, Freeport, Mt. Carroll (Mount Carroll), and Galena. Indiana: Terre Haute, Kansas: Ft. Leavenworth (Fort Leavenworth). Iowa: Keokuck (Keokuk), Ft. Madison (Fort Madison), Burlington, Bloomfield, Keosauga (Keosauqua), Centreville (Centerville), Leon, New Buda, Avon (Ghost town), Clarinda, Sidney, Davenport, DeWitt, Mt. Pleasant (Mount Pleasant), Wapello, Washington, Muscatine, Iowa City, Tipton, Fairfield, Albia, Ottumwa, Oskaloosa, Lancaster (Ghost town after 1904), Montezuma, Marengo, Chariton, Oceola (Osceola), Knoxville, Winterset, Indianola, Fort Des Moines (Des Moines), Newton, Adell (Adel), Mt. Vernon (?), Quincy, Aftan (Afton), Pisgah (Mount Pisgah was a Mormon settlement that became a ghost town as the settlers moved west to Utah after 1852), Lewis, Panora, Glenwood, Kanesville (Council Bluffs), Council Bluff (Council Bluffs), Magnolia, Bellevue, DuBuque (Dubuque), Marion, Anamosa, Delhi, Prairie la Porte (Name changed to Guttenberg in 1851), Garnavillo, West Union, Toledo, Vinton, Cedar Falls, Waverley (Waverly), Clarksville, Marietta (Marietta Township), Nevada, Boonsboro (Annexed to Boone, Iowa in 1887), Homer (Ghost town after the county seat was moved to Fort Dodge in 1856), Eldora, De Korrah (Decorah), Wawkon (Waukon), and Ft. Atkinson (Fort Atkinson). Nebraska: Omaha City (Omaha). Wisconsin: Milwaukee. Minnesota: Ft. Snelling (Fort Snelling) and St. Paul (Saint Paul). The Indian Territory (Oklahoma) shows the Native American tribe of the Cherokees. Kansas shows the Native American tribes of the Osages, the Potawatomies, Sauks, Kickapoos, Delawares, and Kansas. Nebraska shows the Native American tribes of the Ottoes and the Omahas. Populations shown on the map: New Madrid: 1,500 Shawneetown: 1,500 Equality: 750 Caledonia: 250 Vienna: 250 St. Genevieve (Ste. Genevieve): 2,250 Missouri: 682,000 Springfield: 500 Mt. Carmel (Mount Carmel): 1,000 Albion: 250 St. Louis: 77,750 St. Charles: 2,750 Belleville: 3,000 Edwardsville: 750 Alton: 4,000 Grafton: 500 Herman (Hermann): 1,000 Danville: 1,250 Jefferson City: 1,250 Fulton: 3,000 Columbia: 3,250 Boonville: 2,250 Warrensburg: 1,250 Marshall: 1,250 Springfield: 4,500 Gilead: 500 Jerseyville: 750 Carrollton: 750 Winchester: 750 Jacksonville: 2,750 Palmyra: 1,250 Quincy: 7,000 Keytesville: 1,500 Shelbyville: 250 Lexington: 3,750 Chillicothe: 500 Gallatin: 1,500 Richmond: 2,500 Platte City: 500 St. Joseph: 1,000 Danville: 500 Illinois: 851,000 Peoria: 5,500 Rushville: 2,500 Lewiston (Lewistown): 1,500 Knoxville: 500 Keokuck (Keokuk): 2,500 Ft. Madison (Fort Madison): 1,500 Burlington: 5,250 Edina: 250 Bloomfield: 1,000 Chicago: 30,000 Morris: 500 Joliet: 2,750 Batavia: 1,000 Hennepin: 500 Oregon City (Name changed to Oregon in 1843): 500 DeWitt: 750 Mt. Pleasant (Mount Pleasant): 750 Wapello: 750 Washington: 750 Muscatine: 2,500 Iowa City: 1,500 Fairfield: 1,500 Fort Des Moines (Des Moines): 333 Iowa: 192,000 Waukegon (Waukegan): 3,000 Freeport: 2,000 Mt. Carroll (Mount Carroll): 500 Galena: 6,000 Bellevue: 750 DuBuque (Dubuque): 3,000
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Belgium (1851)
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This is a steel engraved map of Belgium published in the atlas, Illustrated Atlas, by J. & F. Tallis in London in 1851. Besides the colored map of Belgium are three vignettes and the Belgian Coat of arms, all designed by J. Marchant and J. B. Allen. Provinces of Belgium Shown on the map: West Flanders, East Flanders, Hainault, Antwerp, South Brabant (Modern Flemish Brabant, Brussels-Capital Region, and Walloon Brabant), Namur, Limburg, Liege, and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg (the Belgian province of Luxembourg and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg). Cities appearing on the map: West Flanders: Adinekerke (Adinkerke), Houthem (Houtem), Oeren, Oostkerke, Nieucap (Nieuwkapelle), Loo (Lo), Furnes (Veurne), S. Catherine (?), Nieuport (Nieuwpoort), Westhende (Westende), Lessinghe (Leffinge), Albertin (?), Ostende (Ostend), Breedene (Bredene), Oudenburg, Jabeke (Jabbeke), Ghistel (Gistel), Sevecot (?), Cromb (?), Codaar (?), Leke, S. Peters, Sohoore, Keyhem (Keiem), Beerst, Dixnmnde (Diksmuide), Rousbrugge (Roesbrugge), Stavele, Haringhe (Haringe), Proven, Poperinghe (Poperinge), Abeele (Abele), St. Joseph (Abele), Merckhem (Merkem), Langemark, Elverdinghe (Elverdinge), S. Jans (Sint-Jan), Ypres, S. Eloy (Sint-Elooi), Reningelot (Reningelst), Wambeke (?), Messines (Mesen), Nieuwekerke (Nieuwkerke), Cnoke (Knokke), Heist, Ramskapelle, W. Kapelle (Westkapelle), Dudzeele (Dudzele), Damme, Moerkerke, Syscele (Sijsele), Assenbroek (Assebroek), Beernem, Bruges, Suivenkerke (Zuienkerke), Houtave, Blankenberg (Blankenberge), Wendune (Wenduine), Vlissegem, Ruysselede (Ruiselede), Thielt (Tielt), Winghene (Wingene), Hille, Pitthem (Pittem), Lichtervelde, Thorout (Torhout), Rudersvoorde (Ruddervoorde), Oostcamp (Oostkamp), S. Michaels (Sint-Michiels), Wynendale (?), Meulebeke, Ingelmunster, Disseghem (Desselgem), Haerlebeke (Harelbeke), Courtray (Kortrijk), Iseghem (Izegem), Roulers (Roeselare), Staeden (Staden), Cortemareq (Kortemark), Hantsaeme (Handzame), Wercken (Werken), Waerghem (Waregem), Oteghem (Otegem), Avelghem (Avelgem), Sweveghem (Zwevegem), Belleghem (Bellegem), S. Antoine (?), Coeyghem (Kooigem), Reckem (Rekkem), Bisseghem (Bissegem), Menin (Menen), Werwick (Wervik), Moorsele, Winkel S. Eloy (Sint-Eloois-Winkel), Tuymelaere (?), Roosebeke (Westrozebeke), and Staedenburg (Stadenberg). East Flanders: Maldeghem (Maldegem), Ursele (Ursel), Waerschoot (Waarschoot), Ecloo (Eeklo), Caprick (Kaprijke), Watervliet, Assenede, Bassevelde, OostEcloo (Oosteeklo), Ertvelde, Bouchoute (Boekhoute), Mendonck (Mendonk), Moerbeke, Overslag (?), Sinay (Sinaai), Stekene, Ft. S. Jean (?), S. Nicolas (Sint-Niklaas), Verrebrack (Verrebroek), Ft. Liefkenshoek, Beveren, Haasdonck (Haasdonk), Somerghem (Zomergem), Vinderhaute (Vinderhoute), Everghem (Evergem), Mariakerke, Ghent, S. Denys (Sint-Denijs-Westrem), Deurle, Bachte (Bachte-Maria-Leerne), Deynse (Deinze), Peteghen (Petegem-aan-de-Leie), Huysse (Huise), Olsenk (Olsene), Loochristy (Lochristi), Lokeren, Overmeere (Overmere), Caeleken (Kalken), Laerne (Laarne), Gontrode (Gontrode), Oosterzeele (Oosterzele), Burst (Burst), Lede, Keersmacher (Keersmaker), Hamme, Zele, Grembergen, Dendermonde, Hofstaede (Hofstade), Alost (Aalst), Welle, Oyeke (Ooike), Oudenarde (Oudenaarde), Sulsique (Zulzeke), Renaix (Ronse), Segelsem (?), S. Maria (Sint-Maria-Horebeke), Nr. Swalm (Zwalm), Brakel, Velsique (Velzeke-Ruddershove), Sotteghem (?), Vryen (Maybe Vrijheld), Grammont (Geraardsbergen), Viane, Kerexken (Kerksken), Denderhauten (Denderhoutem), Ninove, and Smerrebbe (?). Hainault: Warneton (Comines-Warneton), Dottignies, Escanaffe (Escanaffles), Pottes, Celles, Warsoing (Warcoing), Areq (Arc), Vlanine (Velaines), Melle (Melles), Obrigies (Obigies), Pecq, Kain (Kain), Ramegnies (Ramegnies-Chin), Templeuve, Marquain, Tournay (Tournai), Vaulx, Antoing, Hollain, Wadriport (Wattripont), Ainiers (Ainières), Elegnies (Ellignies), Maulde, Lenze (Leuze-en-Hainaut), Ellegnies (Ellignies-Sainte-Anne), Besacles (Basècles), Penwels (Péruwelz), Blaton, Flobecq, Ellezelles, la Hamaide (Lahamaide), Oedenghien (Oeudeghien), Vs. S. Amant (Villers-Saint-Amand), Ath, Tongre (Tongre-Notre-Dame), Auberhies (Aubechies), Beloil (Belœil), Harchies (?), S. Ghislain (Saint-Ghislain), Hensies, Quievrain (Quiévrain), Lessines, Ollegnies (Ollignies), Bassilly, Ghislenghein, Mevregnies (Mévergnies-lez-Lens), Chievres (Chièvres), Lens, Jurbise, R. Rolond (?), Mons, Gemappe (Jemappes), Poturage (Pâturages), Sart (Sars-la-Bruyère), Genly (?), Nouvelle (Nouvelles), Enghien, Thoricourt, Braine le Coamte (Braine-le-Comte), Chaussee (Chaussée-Notre-Dame-Louvignies), Soignies, Thieusies, Havre (Havré), S. Ghislain (Villers-Saint-Ghislain), Bray, Grandreng (Grand-Reng), BellesTetes (?), Naast, Meignault (Mignault), Roeulx (Le Rœulx), le Hestre (?), Rosignies (?), Liberchies, Frasne (Frasnes-lez-Gosselies), Villers (Villers-Perwin), Ligny, Fleurus, Gosselies, Gilly, Trazegnies, Courcelle (Courcelles), Charleroy (Charleroi), Binch (Binche), Aldegonde (?), Anderlues (Anderlues), Merbes le Chat (Merbes-le-Château), Thuin, Ragnee (?), Stree (Strée), Ham (Ham-sur-Heure-Nalinnes), Gerpinnes, Beaumont, Leugnies, Relournaut (?), Xivry (Sivry), Ranse, Lorson (?), Robechies, Chimay, S. Remy (Saint-Remy), Forges, and Seloigne (Seloignes). Antwerp: Zwyndrecht (Zwijndrecht), Santvliet (Zandvliet), Stabroek, Ft. Lillo (Fort Lillo), F. S. Philip (Fort van Sint-Filips), Antwerp, Esschen (Essen), Achterbroek, Zilver Hodeje (?), Putten (Putte), Capelle (Kapellen), Braeschaet (Brasschaat), Wynigem (Wijnegem), Halle, S. Antonius (Sint-Antonius), Westmalle, Gr. Veerle (Groot-Veerle), Meerle, Meer, Minderhout, Loenhout, Brecht, Hoogstraeten (Hoogstraten), Rykvorsel (Rijkevorsel), Hoek (?), Oostmalle, Vlimmeren, Gierle, Severdonck (Gene-Zevendonk), Oude (Oud-Turnhout), Turnhout, Merexplas (Merksplas), Geheul, Sterte (?), Poppel, Welde (Weelde), Billevleen (?), Voorheide (Part of Pleintje now), Postel, Arendonk, Rethy (Retie), Dessel, S. Amants (Sint-Amands), Thisselt (Tisselt), Willebroeck (Willebroek), Paers (Puurs), Haesdonek (?), Boom, Conticq (Kontich), Wilryck (Wilrijk), Mortsel, Vreemde (Vremde), Mechlen (Mechelen), Peulus (Peulis), S. C. Waever (Sint-Katelijne-Waver), Duffell (Duffel), Lier, Nazareth (Nazaret), Embleken (Emblem), Kessel, Gnestel (Gestel), Viersel, Schrick (Schriek), Beersel (Beerzel), Itegem, Grobbendonck (Grobbendonk), Herenthals (Herentals), St. Gomar (?), Noorderwyck (Noorderwijk), Morkhoven, Westerloo (Westerlo), Herselt, Tongerloo (Tongerlo), Oevel, Oolen (Olen), Lichtaert (Lichtaart), Aert (?), Hesse (?), Geel, Gestel, Moll (Mol), Baelen (Balen), and Merhout (Meerhout). South Brabant (Modern Flemish Brabant, Brussels-Capital Region, and Walloon Brabant): Modern Flemish Brabant: Steenuffel (Steenhuffel), Opwyk (Opwijk), Mollem, Assche (Asse), Londerseel (Londerzeel), Wolverthem (?), Vilvorde (Vilvoorde), Elewyt (Elewijt), Melsbroeck (?), Bucken (Buken), Haeght (Haacht), Betecom (Betekom), Aerschot (Aarschot), Vrouwe Perck (?), S. Joriswinge (Sint-Joris-Winge), Averbeden, Sichem (?), Montague (?), Beckevoort, Betz (?), Cortenaecken (Kortenaken), Haelen (Halen), Diest, Rummen (?), S. Pierre (Sint-Pieters-Kapelle), Vollezeeles (Vollezele), Herinnes (Herne), Lerbeeck (Leerbeek), Castre (?), Elingen, S. M. Lennick (Sint-Martens-Lennik), Wambeke (Wambeek), Alsembergh (Alsemberg), Linkenbeek (Linkebeek), Tervueren (Tervuren), Kortenberg, Overyssche (Overijse), Neryssche (Neerijse), Tombeek, Leefdael (Leefdaal), Winxel (Winksele), Corbeeck (Korbeek-Dijle), Louvain (Leuven), Vlanden (Blanden), Hougaerde (Hoegaarden), Tirlemont, (Tienen) Binkom (Binkom), Clabbeeke (Glabbeek), Leau (Zoutleeuw), and Hal (Halle). Modern Brussels-Capital Region: Anderlecht, Brussels, Schoneburg (?), Heembeek, and Woluwe (Woluwe-Saint-Lambert). Modern Walloon Brabant: Hamme (Hamme-Mille), Bossut (Bossut-Gottechain), Grez (Grez-Doiceau), Mellain (Mélin), Rebeckque (Rebecq), Saintes, Tubic (Tubize), Chat (Braine-le-Château), Waterloo, Hougomont (Hougoumont), Bois Sr. Isaac (Bois-Seigneur-Isaac), Orival (Bois d' Orival), Nivelles, Mt. St. Jean (Mont-Saint-Jean), Ohain, la Belle Alliance (La Belle Alliance), Planchenoit (Plancenoit), Genappe, Quartre Bras, Marbais, Wavre, Limale (Limal), Mt. St. Guibert (Mont-Saint-Guibert), Cour S. Ettienne (Court-Saint-Étienne), Rx. Miroir (Roux-Miroir), Opprebais, Orbois (Orbais), Perwez le Marche (Perwez), Jodoigne, Glimes, Jauche, and Ramillies. Namur: Gonrieux, Oigny (?), Couvin, Frasne (Frasnes-lez-Couvin), Oloy (Olloy-sur-Viroin), Mariembourg, Dourbes, Roly, Mattaigne (Matagne-la-Grande/Matagne-la-Petite), Sautour, Surice, Philippeville, Franchimont, Slenrieux (Silenrieux), Rosee (Rosée), Florenne (Florennes), Walcourt, Gourdinne, Tarsienne (Tarcienne), Hansinne (Hanzinne), S. Gerard (Saint-Gérard), Mariame (Morialmé), Stave, Leroux (Le Roux), Corenne, Serville, Wiellen (Weillen), Bouvignes (Bouvignes-sur-Meuse), Senenne (?), Barnot (Burnot), Bois de Villers (Bois-de-Villers), Fosse (Fosses-la-Ville), Malogne (Malonne), Florette (Floreffe), Ligny, Onos (Onoz), Temploux, Risnes (Rhisnes), Botey (Bothey), Avelle (Ardenelle?), Erfnage (Ernage), Gembloux, Sauveniere (Sauvenière), Dhuy, Leuze, Champion, Frisee (?), Namur, Bonnines (Boninne), Seilles, Andenne, Thon, Maiseronle (?), Tombes (Faulx-Les-Tombes), Loyers, Andoy, Geronsart (?), L'Agneau (?), Assesse, Floree (Florée), Jassogne, Nattoie (Natoye), Godinne, Hubinne, Emptinne, Ciney, Awagne, Thine (Thynes), Sorinne (Sorinnes), Achin (Achêne), Dinant, Custine (Custinne), Seminchamps (?), S. Remy (?), Mentil S. Blaise (Mesnil-Saint-Blaise), Eglise (Mesnil-Église), Houjet (Houyet), Wanlin, Bardonville (Baronville), Beauraing, Severy (Sevry), Veneiche (Vonêche), Ave (Ave-et-Auffe), Rochefort, Wellin, Chanly, Barzin, Neupont, Daverdisse, Malvoisin, Villerzies (Willerzie), Gedinne, Porcheresse, Graide, Gosne (Goesnes), Havelange, Bachelle, Somme (Somme-Leuze), Noiseaux, Sensain (Sinsin), Hogne, Martin (?), Orchimont, and Sugny. Limburg: Lommel, Achel, Haverbeck (?), Hamont (Hamont-Achel), Nether Pelt (Neerpelt), Over Pelt (Overpelt), Kautille (Kaulille), KL Breugel (Kleine-Brogel), Excel (Eksel), Hechtel (Hechtel-Eksel), Wechmael (Wijchmaal), Peer, Bree, Eelicum (Ellikom), GrRoy (Gruitrode), Hoef, Helchteren (Houthalen-Helchteren), Op Hoven (Ophoven, Maaseyck (Maaseik), Rothem (Rotem), Ft. Op Oeteren (Opoeteren), Ob Glabbeeck (Opglabbeek), Hingelhoef (?), Winterslag, Niel (Now a part of As), Asch (As), Wucht (?), Stockem (Dilsen-Stokkem), Mecheln (Maasmechelen), Reckem (Rekem), Haren (Neerharen), Ghenck (Genk), Diepenbeek, Beyerst (Beverst), Bilsen (Bilzen), Corspel (Korspel), Oostham (?), Coursel (Koersel), Houthalen (Houthalen-Helchteren), Tessenderlen (Tessenderlo), Beringen, Solder (Zolder), Berekenin (Berkenen), Bolderberg, Linchout (Linkhout), Haelen (Halen), Herek (Herk-de-Stad), Hasselt, Cosen (Kozen), Cortenhasch (Kortenbos), Alcken (Alken), Guichoven (Guigoven), Vletoghem (Vlijtingen), Rymps (Riemst), Tongres (Tongeren), Ob Repe (?), Looz (Borgloon), Keers (Heers), Wellen, S. Tron (Sint-Truiden), Brusthem (Brustem), Ailst (Aalst), Gelinden (Gelinden), Wellem (Velm), Borlo, and Frezin (?). Liege: Wassiege (Wasseiges), Wonck, Landen, Hallet (Petit-Hallet or Grand-Hallet), Hannut, Jere (Geer), Turine (Tourinne), Mefrle (Meeffe), Fumat (Fumal), Hucorgne (Huccorgne), Moha, Venam (?), Villers (Villers-le-Bouillet), Bodegnee (Bodegnée), Celle (Celles), Gd. Hacq (Grand-Axhe), Doncel (Donceel), Chock (Chokier), Hologne (Grâce-Hollogne), Nouville (Noville), Warem (Waremme), Lantremonge (Lantremange), Lens (Lens-sur-Geer), Fize (Fexhe-le-Haut-Clocher), Liege (Liège), Rocour (Rocourt), Juprelle, Haccour (Haccourt), Vise (Visé), Mortier, Housse, Jupille (?), Aubel, Clermont, Herve, Batice (Battice), Soumagne, Aulne (Olne), Limburg (Limbourg), Verviers, Theux, Poleur (Polleur), le Sort (Sart), Spa, Francorchamp (Francorchamps), Stavelot, Gleize (La Gleize), Nonceveux, Leray (La Reid), Louvaigne (Louveigné), Sougnez (Sougné-Remouchamps), Sprimont, Esneux, Beaufay (Beaufays), Wane (Wanne), St. Vith, Basse Rodeux (Basse-Bodeux), Chevron, Lierneux, Ferriere (Ferrières), My, Harze (Harzé), Ivot (Ivoz-Ramet), Avister, S. Severin (Saint-Séverin), Fraigneux (Yernée-Fraineux), Nandrin, Neuville (Neuville-sous-Huy), Soxhet (Xhos), Comblain (Comblain-au-Pont), Ouffet, Lenche (Linchet), Terwagne, Huy, Vile (Vyle-et-Tharoul), Avain (Les Avins), Pailhe, Bois, and Clavier. Luxembourg: Redu, Transinne, Gr Holleux (Grand-Halleux), Salm Chat (Salm-Château), Comonster (Commanster), Behault (Beho), S. Martin (?), Sterpigny, Alt Salm (Vielsalm), Sart (Petit-Sart), Hare, Heid (Heyd), Bomal, Durbuy, Biron (Bîron), Erezee (Érezée), Melreux, Rendeux, Marie (?), Marcourt, la Roche (La Roche-en-Ardenne), Fronville, Marenne, Marche (Marche-en-Famenne), Roy, Bande, Halleux, Vecquemont (Vecmont), Hubermont, Warempage, Cena (Cens), Tenneville, Bellevue (Belle-Vue), Nassogne, Neuville (Laneuville-au-Bois), Avenne (Awenne), Grupont, Arville, S. Hubert (Saint-Hubert), Smuid, Libbinbos (Libin-Bas), Romagne (Remagne), Rondu, H. Bras (Bras la Haute), B. Bras (Bras la Basse), Maissin, Ourth (Ourthe), Steinbach, Novelle (Noville), Wicourt, Long Champs (Champs), Fraiture, Bihain, Tailles (Petites-Tailles), S. Urban, Fontenaille, Houfalize (Houffalize), Engreaux (Engreux), Roumont (Roûmont), Flamizoul (Flamisoul), Flamierge, Louville (?), Hemroule (Hèm'roûle), Bastogne, Houmout (Hoûmont), Villeroux, Loutrebois (Lutrebois), Mohet (Morhet), Loutremange (Lutremange), Messancy, Buvange, Weyler, Arlon, Heischling (?), Attert, Tintange, Redst (?), Warnach, Strinchamp (Strainchamps), Hollange, Remichampagne, Burnan, Vaulx les Rosiere (Vaux-les-Rosières), Neuville (Laneuville), Verlaine, Neuvillers, Rosart (Rôssart), Neufchateau (Neufchâteau), Bertrix, Auby (Auby-sur-Semois), Palizeru (Paliseul )l, Mergny (Merny), Mogimont, Belvaux (Bellevaux), Bouillon, S. Cecile (?), Martilly, Chiny, Florenville, Villers d'Orvat (Villers-devant-Orval), d'Orval (Ab d'Orval), Velansart (Valansart), Izel, Asnoix (Assenois), Thibesart (Thibessart), Rossignol, Tintigny, Meix (Meix-devant-Virton), Etale (Étalle), Fauxvillers (Fauvillers), l Eglise (Léglise), Becheme (Behême), Anlier, Habay le Neuve (Habay-la-Neuve), Hachy, Chartenelle (Chantemelle), Valansart (Vlessart), Heemsteert (Heinstert), Virton, Ethe (?), and Signeux (Signeulx). France: Dunkirk, Armentieres (Armentières), Conde (Condé-sur-l'Escaut), Valenciennes, Maubeuge, Avesnes (Avesnes-sur-Helpe), Charlemont (Fort de Charlemont), Givet, Sierck (Sierck-les-Bains), Longwy, Mezieres (Charleville-Mézières), Sedan, and Montmedy (Montmédy). Netherlands: Sasvan Gent (Sas van Gent), Flushing (Vlissingen), Cadzand, Cassandria (?), Sluis, Oostburg, Aardenburg, Terneuse (Terneuzen), Axel, Hulst, Bergen op Zoom, Breda, Venlo, and Roermond. Germany: Aix-la-Chapelle (Aachen) and Dasbourg (Dasburg). Grand Duchy of Luxembourg: Ob Beslingen (Hautbellain), Weise Wampach (Weiswampach), Busbellain (Basbellain), Hachville (Hachiville), Sassel, Heinerscheyd (Heinerscheid), Clervaux, Hosingen, Allerhorn (Allerbur), Doningen (Doennange), Dernbach (Derenbach), Holzthum, Gelbom (?), Wiltz, Soule (?), Harling (Harlange), Berl (Berlé), Kaundorf, Esch (Esch-sur-Sûre), Eschdorf, Gralingen, Michelau, Bettendorf, Diekirch, Ettelbruck, Vianden, Haller, Echternach, Ostweiler (Osweiler), Born, Feltz (?), Consdorf, Hirsburg (?), Beydweiller (Beidweiler), Betsdorf (Betzdorf), Grevenmachern (Grevenmacher), Rodt (Roodt-sur-Syre), Junglinster, Burglinsten (Bourglinster), Auwen (?), Beyren, Sandweiler, Wormeldange, Bous, Remich, Schengen, Dalheim, Tettinghen (Tétange), Bettemburg (Bettembourg), Alzingen, Hesperange, Luxembourg (Luxembourg City), Eich (Eich, a quarter in Luxembourg City), Valserlingen (?), Helmdingen (Helmsange), Lintgen, Rollingen, Mersch, Pittingen (Pettingen), Useldange, Berg, Mertzig, Belvoux (Belvaux), Differdange, Clemancy (Clemency), Pissingen (Piseng), Nr. Eller (?), Capweiler (Kapweiler), Beckerich, Ooperen (?), Grosbous, Holz, and Sirret (Surré). In the upper left corner of the map is the Coat of Arms of Belgium. In the left central part of the map, there is a vignette entitled Altar of St. Gudule, Brussels. This Altar is located within the Cathedral of St. Michael and St. Gudula in Brussels. In the lower left corner of the map there is a vignette entitled Monuments on the Plains of Waterloo. These monuments commemorate the battle that took place on June 18, 1815 in which Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated. The entire right side of the map is a vignette entitled Antwerp Cathedral showing the Cathedral of Our Lady in Antwerp with a religious procession. John Tallis was an English cartographer and publisher who lived from 1817 to 1876 and published from the 1830s to the 1850s in London at his company J. & F. Tallis & Co.
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Title
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Comitatus Volkenborg et Dalem (1702)
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Date
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1702-01-01
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Summary
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This is a highly detailed copper engraved map Belgium along the Meuse River from Liege to Maastricht. This engraving is taken from a plate from the 1696 edition of P. van der Slart's 'Theatrum Belgii Foederati' with small changes. Slart's map was printed from the same plate of the 1635 edition of 'Vyerighe Colom' by Jacob Aertsz Colom. There is a mileage cartouche and a title cartouche. This is from the publication, Atlas portatif, ou, le nouveau theatre de la guerre en Europe: contenant les cartes geographiques, avec les plans des villas & fortresses les plus exposees aux revolutions presented: accompagne d'une nouvelle methode pour apprendre facilement la geographie & la chronologie des potentats. A Amsterdam Chez Daniel de la Feuille 1702, which roughly translates in English to, Portable Atlas, or, The New Theatre of War in Europe Containing Geographical Maps, with City Plans and Fortress Plans which are most Exposed to the Revolution Presented: Accompanied by a New Method to Easily Learn Geography and Chronology. In Amsterdam by Chez Daniel de la Feuille in 1702. Daniel de La Feuille lived from 1640 until 1709. He was from Sedan in Northern France and was born to Huguenot parents. In 1683, he and his family fled religious persecution to Amsterdam and became an engraver and cartographer. Countries appearing on this map: Belgium and the Netherlands. Cities appearing on this map: Belgium: Wallonia Region: Liège: Liège: S. Gille (?), Liege (Liège), S. Lenart (There is a Rue St. Lèonard in Liège near where this town should be), Herstal, Viuenges (Vivegnis), Hermal (Hermalle-sous-Argenteau), Sluetel (?), Liese (Lixhe), Nay (Lanaye/Petit Lanaye), Flemish Region: Limburg: Membergh (Membruggen), Wulre (?), Sichem (Zichen-Zussen-Bolder), Montenacken, Emet (?), Remst (Riemst), Kisselt (Kesselt), Vlietingen (Vlijtingen), Roesmervelt (?), Veltwesel (Veldwezelt), Brockhof (?), Gelick (Gellik), Loenake (Lanaken), Scholez (?), Petersen (Pietersheim), Hoichte (Hocht Abbey), Neerharen (Neerharen), Com. Recken (Rekem), Vechouen (?), Grimmini (?), Mechelen (Maasmechelen), Vucht, Esden (Eisden), Luit (Leut), Netherlands: Limburg: F. S. Pierre (Fort Sint Pieter located in the Sint Pieter neighborhood of Maastricht), Maestricht (Maastricht),
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Title
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Le Comte D'Artois auecq le Com: de S. Paul. (1702)
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Date
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1702-01-01
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Summary
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This is a highly detailed copper engraved map of the area of Artois in Northern France as well as parts of Belgium. There is a mileage cartouche and a title cartouche. This is from the publication, Atlas portatif, ou, le nouveau theatre de la guerre en Europe: contenant les cartes geographiques, avec les plans des villas & fortresses les plus exposees aux revolutions presented: accompagne d'une nouvelle methode pour apprendre facilement la geographie & la chronologie des potentats. A Amsterdam Chez Daniel de la Feuille 1702, which roughly translates in English to, Portable Atlas, or, The New Theatre of War in Europe Containing Geographical Maps, with City Plans and Fortress Plans which are most Exposed to the Revolution Presented: Accompanied by a New Method to Easily Learn Geography and Chronology. In Amsterdam by Chez Daniel de la Feuille in 1702. Daniel de La Feuille lived from 1640 until 1709. He was from Sedan in Northern France and was born to Huguenot parents. In 1683, he and his family fled religious persecution to Amsterdam and became an engraver and cartographer.
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Title
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Map No. 7. United States (1853)
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Summary
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Detailed single page historical steel engraved map of the Central Great Lakes published in 1853. This map depicts Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, and parts of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Missouri, Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia (West Virginia and Virginia), and North Carolina as well as a small region of Canada. The map shows several geographic details on cities, towns, rivers, mountains, and islands. Along the bottom edge is written: Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1853 by Daniel Burgess & Co in the Clerks office of the Southern District of New York. States appearing on the Map: Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia (West Virginia and Virginia), and North Carolina. Cities appearing on the Map: Georgia: Dalton. Tennessee: Newport, Sevierville, Knoxville, Dandridge, Washington (Old Washington), Athens, Cleveland, Kingston, Benton, Madisonville, Marysville (Maryville), Smithville, McMinnsville (McMinnville), Jasper, Sparta, Pikesville (Pikeville), Harrison, Chattanooga, Lewisburg, Franklin, Murfreesboro, Shelbyvile, Fayetteville, Winchester, Woodbury, Manchester, Waynesboro, Lawrenceburg, Pulaski, Columbia, Gordon (Ghost Town), Centreville (Centerville), Bolivar, Purdy, Savanna (Savannah), Jackson, Lexington, Perryville, Huntingdon, Memphis, Raleigh (Now a community in Memphis), Somerville, Covington, Brownsville, Ripley, Trenton, Taylorsville (Name changed in 1885 to Mountain City), Elizabethtown (Elizabethton), Blountsville (Blountville), Jonesboro (Jonesborough), Greeneville, Tazewell, Rutledge, Rogersville, Montgomery (Ghost Town since 1870), Jacksboro, Clinton, Carthage, Gainesboro, Monroe, Jamestown, Springfield, Gallatin, Lebanon, Nashville, La Fayette (Lafayette), Clarksville, Charlotte, Waverly, Dover, Paris, Camden, Dresden, Dyersburg, and Troy. Kentucky: Mt. Pleasant (Name changed in 1912 to Harlan), Barboursville (Barbourville), Monticello, Williamsburg, Jamestown, Albany, Burkesville, Tompkinsville, Russellville, Franklin, Scottsville, Elkton, Hopkins V. (Hopkinsville), Cadiz, Benton, Murray, Mayfield, Hickman, Columbus, Blandville, Clinton, Piketon (Name changed in 1850 to Pikeville), Prestonburg, Whitesburg, Paintville (Paintsville), Manchester, Hazard, Jackson, Harrodsbg (Harrodsburg), Dan V. (Danville), Stanford, Liberty, Somerset, Lancaster, Richmond, Nicholas V. (Nicholasville), Mt. Vernon, London, Irvine, Elizabeth T. (Elizabethtown), Shepherds V. (Shepherdsville), Mumfords V. (Munfordville), Glasgow, Bards T. (Bardstown), Columbia, Greensburg, Campbellsville, Lebanon, Springfield, Bowling Green, Brownsville, Morgantown, Litchfield (Leitchfield), Hartford, Hardinsburg, Hawes V. (Hawesville), Princeton, Greenville, Madisonville, Owensboro, Henderson, Morganfield, Paducah, Smithland, Marion, Louisa, Grayson, Greenupsburg (Name changed in 1872 to Greenup), Mt. Sterling, West Liberty, Owings V. (Owingsville), Flemingsburg, Washington (Old Washington), Clarksburg, Maysville, Frankfort, Lawrenceb (Lawrenceburg), Versailles, George T. (Georgetown), Winchester, Lexington, Paris, Carlisle, Cynthiana, Owenton, Williams T. (Williamstown), Warsaw, Falmouth, Augusta, Taylors V. (Taylorsville), Shelby V. (Shelbyville), Louisville, La Grange, N. Castle (New Castle), Bedford, Carrollton, Brandenburg, Burlington, Covington, and Newport. Indiana: Rome, Mt. Vernon, Rockport, N. Albany (New Albany), Charleston (Charlestown), Lexington, Madison, Seymour, Vevay, Vernon, Fredonia, Corydon, Mt. Pleasant (Mount Pleasant), Paoli, Salem, Brownstown, Bedford, Harmony (New Harmony), Evans V. (Evansville), Boon V. (Boonville), Princeton, Jaspser, Petersburg, Vincennes, Washington, Lawrenceburg, Liberty, Richmond, Columbus, Versailles, Greensburg, Shelbyville, Brookville, Rushville, Conners V. (Connersville), Knights T. (Knightstown), Greenfield, Centreville, Cambridge City, New Castle, Bloomington, Nash V. (Nashville), Spencer, Martinsville, Franklin, Green Castle (Greencastle), Danville, Indianapolis, Merom, Bloomfield, Bowling Green, Terre Haute, Rockville, Newport, Decatur, Nobles V. (Noblesville), Anderson T. (Anderson), Muncie, Winchester, Portland, Hartford (Hartford City), Marion, Bluffton, Huntington, Wabash, Crawfordsville, Lebanon, Frankfort, La Fayette (Lafayette), Delphi, Kocomo (Kokomo), Peru, Logansport, Monticello, Covington, Williamsport, Rensselaer, Warsaw, Columbia (Columbia City), Ft. Wayne (Fort Wayne), Auburn, Augusta (Ghost town after 1850), Goshen, Lima (Howe), Angola, Winamac, Rochester, Plymouth, La Porte, Michigan City, South Bend, Crown Point, and Valparaiso. Illinois: Cairo, Brownsville (Ghost Town after Flooding from the Big Muddy River), Mt. Vernon (Mount Vernon), Shelbyville, Vandalia, Springfield, Danville, Pontiac, Peoria, Chicago, Juliet (Changed to Joliet in 1845), Ottawa, La Salle (LaSalle), and Dixon. Viginia (Virginia and West Virginia): West Virginia: Point Pleasant and Parkersburg. Ohio: Ironton, Gallipolis, Portsmouth, Georgetown, West Union, Chester, Marietta, McConnells V. (McConnelsville), Zanesville, Sarahs V. (Sarahsville), Woodsfield, Piketon, Jackson, McArthur, Athens, Chillicothe, Circleville, Logan, Lancaster, Columbus, Somerset, Hillsboro, Wilmington, Washington (Washington Court House), Xenia, London, Springfield, Eaton, Dayton, Hamilton, Lebanon, Batavia, Cincinnati, Bellair (Bellaire), Clairsville (St. Clairsville), Steubenville, New Lisbon (Lisbon), Cambridge, Coshocton, Cadiz, N. Philadelphia (New Philadelphia), Millersburg, Carrollton, Canton, Massilon (Massillon), Wooster, Newark, Mt. Vernon (Mount Vernon), Mansfield, Mt. Gilead (Mount Gilead), Ashland, Urbana, Marysville, Delaware, Bellefontaine, Marion, Kenton, Upper Sandusky, Bucyrus, Greenville, Troy, Sidney, Celina, Wappakonetta (Wapakoneta), Lima, Kalida, Van Wert, Canfield, Warren, Jefferson, Akron, Ravenna, Medina, Chardon, Painesville, Cleveland, Ohio City (Now a neighborhood of Cleveland it was annexed in 1854), Elyria, Norwalk, Sandusky City (Sandusky), Findlay, Tiffin, Fremont, Port Clinton, Perrysburg, Toledo, Antwerp, Defiance, Napoleon, and Bryan. Michigon: Monroe, New Buffalo, and Niles. Wisconsin: Milwaukee. Populations show on the map: Washington: 250 Tennessee: 1,003,000 Manchester: 2,000 Memphis: 8,750 Covington: 500 Brownsville: 1,000 Russellville: 1,250 Scotsville: 500 Nashville: 10,500 Camden: 250 Dresden: 1,250 Hickman: 4,500 Harrodsbg (Harrodsburg): 1,500 Kentucky: 982,000 Princeton: 750 Mt. Vernon: 1,000 Paducah: 2,500 Gallipolis: 2,250 Portsmouth: 4,000 Frankfort: 2,000 Lexington: 7,000 Augusta: 500 Louisville: 43,250 N. Albany (New Albany): 10,000 Charleston (Charlestown): 4,000 Lexington: 2,250 Madison: 8,000 Vevay: 2,000 Fredonia: 250 Corydon: 500 Paoli: 1,500 Salem: 1,250 Evans V. (Evansville): 3,500 Boon V. (Boonville): 250 Princeton: 750 Vincennes: 2,000 Washington: 2,500 Chester: 1,500 Marietta: 4,250 Zanesville: 8,000 Woodsfield: 500 Piketon: 500 Jackson: 500 Athens: 3,250 Chillicothe: 7,000 Circleville: 3,750 Logan: 750 Lancaster: 3,500 Columbus: 18,000 Somerset: 1,250 Hillsboro: 1,500 Wilmington: 1,250 Washington (Washington Court House): 500 Xenia: 7,000 London: 500 Springfield: 5,000 Newport: 6,000 Lawrenceburg: 3,500 Liberty: 1,000 Eaton: 1,250 Dayton; 11,000 Hamilton: 1,500 Lebanon: 2,000 Batavia: 2,750 Cincinnati: 115,500 Columbus: 1,500 Shelbyville: 1,000 Brookville: 3,500 Rushville: 2,750 Conners V. (Connersville): 1,000 Greenfield: 1,000 New Castle: 750 Franklin: 1,000 Green Castle (Greencastle): 1,250 Danville: 250 Bowling Green: 1,250 Newport: 500 Steubenville: 7,250 New Lisbon (Lisbon): 1,750 Cambridge: 2,250 Coshocton: 750 Cadiz: 2,500 Carrollton: 750 Canton: 4,250 Wooster: 4,250 Newark: 5,000 Mt. Vernon (Mount Vernon): 3,750 Mansfield: 3,250 Urbana: 3,500 Marysville: 500 Delaware: 3,750 Marion: 2,000 Kenton: 1,000 Bucyrus: 2,000 Ohio: 1,980,000 Decatur: 250 Greenville: 3,250 Troy: 2,000 Sidney: 1,250 Celina: 250 Lima: 750 Nobles V. (Noblesville): 1,500 Anderson T. (Anderson): 1,250 Hartford (Hartford City): 250 Marion: 750 Bluffton: 500 Huntington: 500 Crawfordsville: 1,250 Frankfort: 500 La Fayette (Lafayette): 6,250 Peru: 2,000 Indiana: 988,000 Covington: 1,250 Williamsport: 250 Canfield: 1,500 Warren: 3,000 Jefferson: 1,000 Akron: 3,250 Ravenna: 2,250 Medina: 2,000 Chardon: 1,500 Painesville: 3,000 Cleveland: 17,000 Elyria: 2,500 Norwalk: 3,250 Sandusky City (Sandusky): 5,000 Findlay: 2,000 Tiffin: 2,750 Fremont: 1,000 Port Clinton: 250 Perrysburg: 1,750 Toledo: 3,750 Defiance: 1,250 Napoleon: 500 Warsaw: 500 Goshen: 750 Lima (Howe): 1,250 Angola: 250 Rochester: 1,500 La Porte: 1,750
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Title
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Central America and the West Indian Islands (1863)
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Date
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1863-01-01
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Summary
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This is a highly detailed copper engraved map of Central America and the West Indies published in 1863. This was created by A. K. Johnston for his book entitled, School Atlas of General & Descriptive Geography which was published by William Blackwood & Sons. Alexander Keith Johnston was a Scottish Geographer who lived from 1804 to 1871. This map has a section along with the title which states: Central America and the West Indian Islands, A. K. Johnston, F. R. S. E., Scale: 200 miles to an inch, 14,000,000 of nature, Scale of English Miles, The West Indian Islands are sometimes denominated the "Columbian Archipelago" or "The Antilles." In some English Charts the term "Leeward Isles", is erroneously applied to those of the Caribbean Group extending from Porto Rico to Dominica, those from Martinique to Tobago, being styled the "Windward Isles.", Railways, (B.)-British, (Da.)-Danish, (DU.)-Dutch, (F.)-French, (S.)-Spanish, (Sw.)-Swedish. Around the edge of the map reads: General Geography, Plate 25, William Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh & London. Countries appearing on the map: Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago, Grenada, Barbados, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Saint Lucia, Martinique, Curaçao, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Dominica, Guadeloupe, Montserrat, Antigua and Barbuda, Saint Kitts and Nevis, U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, Belize, Cuba, Mexico, The Bahamas, and the United States of America. Cities appearing on the map: Venezuela: Angostura or S. Thomas (Ciudad Bolívar), Corona (?), Cabruta, Merida (Mérida), Varinas (Barinas), Barcelona, Cumana (Cumaná), Cariaco, Assumption (La Asunción), Caracas, la Guayra (La Guaira), Coro (Santa Ana de Coro), Cariaco (?), and Maracaybo (Maracaibo). Colombia: Ocana (Ocaña), Tola (Tolú), Saragoza (Zaragoza Municipality), Antiquia (Santa Fe de Antioquia), Caceres (Cáceres), Uraba (?), Honda (Bahia Honda?), la Hacha (Riohacha), Sa. Marta (Santa Marta), and Cartagena. Panama: Yavisa (Yaviza), Carreto, Chame, Porto Bello (Portobelo), Aspinwall (Colón), Chagres (Now the World Heritage Site of Chagres and Fort San Lorenzo which was depopulated in 1916 and the residents were moved to Nuevo Chagres), Los Santos (La Villa de los Santos), Santiago (Santiago de Veraguas), S. Lorenzo (San Lorenzo), David, and Estrella (La Estrella). Costa Rica: Eredia (?), Cartago, S. Jose (San José), Alahuela (Alajuela), Nicoya, Bagases (Bagaces), and Guanacasto (Liberia). Trinidad and Tobago: Trinidad (British): P. of Spain/P. Espana (Port of Spain). Tobago (British): Scarborough. Grenada (British): S. George (St. George's). Barbadoes (Barbados) (British): Bridge Tn. (Bridgetown). S. Vincent (Saint Vincent and the Grenadines) (British): Kingstown. S. Lucia (Saint Lucia) (British): Castries. Martinique (French): Pt. Royal (Fort-de-France). Curacao (Curaçao) (Dutch): Williamstadt (Willemstad). Nicaragua: S. Juan de Nicaragua or Grey Town (San Juan de Nicaragua), S. Carlos (San Carlos), Trinidad (?), Blewfields (Bluefields), Rivas or Nicaragua (Rivas), Masaya, Granada, Managua, Leon (León), Realejo (El Realejo), Comolapa (Comalapa?), Segovia (Ocotal), and Chinandega. Honduras: Juticalpa, Catacamas, Choluteca, Tegucigalpa, Comayagua, Copan (Copán ruins of ancient Mayan city), Poyais (Fake place created by Gregor MacGregor for a scheme), Truxillo (Trujillo), Lasal (?), and Omoa. S. Salvador (El Salvador): La Union (La Unión), S. Miguel (San Miguel), Concordia (?), S. Vicente (San Vicente), Tobasco (?), La Libertad, S. Salvador (San Salvador), and Sonsonate. Guatemala: Chiquimula, New Guatemala (Guatemala City), Istapa (Iztapa), Old Guatemala (Antigua Guatemala), Zacatepec (?), S. Thomas (Santo Tomás de Castilla), Livingston, S. Luis (San Luis), S. Andres (San Andrés), Coban (Cobán), Quesaltenango (Quetzaltenango), Solola (Sololá), and Tetonicapan (Totonicapán). Dominica (British): Roseau. Guadeloupe (French): Base Terre (Basse-Terre). Montserrat (British): Plymouth (Abandoned in 1997 after volcanic eruption and burying under pyroclastic flows). Antigua and Barbuda: Antigua (British): S. John (St. John's). Barbuda (British). Saint Kitts and Nevis: S. Christopher (Saint Kitts) (British): Basse Terre (Basseterre). Nevis (British). U.S. Virgin Islands: Sta. Cruz (Saint Croix) (Danish): Christianstadt (Christiansted). S. John (Saint John) (Danish). S. Thomas (Saint Thomas) (Danish). Porto Rico (Puerto Rico) (Spanish): San Juan and Ponce. Dominica (Dominican Republic): S. Domingo (Santo Domingo), Savanna (Sabana de la Mar), Samana (Samaná), Cotuy (Cotuí), La Vega, Santiago (Santiago de los Caballeros), Monte Christi (Monte Cristi), Bunica (?), and Nelva (Neiba). Haiti: Cape Haitien (Cap-Haïtien), S. Nicolas (Môle-Saint-Nicolas), Port au Prince (Port-au-Prince), Tiburon, Cayes (Les Cayes), and Jacmel. Jamaica (British): Kingston, P. Antonio (Port Antonio), Port Royal, Spanish Tn. (Spanish Town), Falmouth, and Savanna la Mar (Savanna-la-Mar). Brit. Honduras (Belize): Manati (?) and Balize (Belize City). Cuba: Baracoa, Cuba (Santiago de Cuba), Holguin (Holguín), Bayamo, S. Salvador (?), S. Miguel (San Miguel de Baga), Nuevitas, S. Maria de Pt. Principe (Camagüey), Pto. Principe (?), Trinidad, S. Clara (Santa Clara), S. Juan (?), Cienfuegos, Cardenas (Cárdenas), Matanzas, Batavano (Batabanó), Santiago (Santiago de las Vegas which is now a ward of Havana), Havana, Bahia Hoirda (?), and Pinar del Rio (Pinar del Río). Mexico: Yucatan: Arena (?), Bacalar, Campeachy (Campeche City), Seyba (Seybaplaya), Victoria, Balchaco (?), Cuyo (El Cuyo), Silan (?), Valladollid (Valladolid), Merida (Mérida), and Sisal. Chiapas: Tapachula, Palenque, Comitan (Comitán), and Ciudad Real (San Cristóbal de las Casas). Tabasco: Tabasco (?), Palasada (Palizada), Chiltepeque (Chiltepec), and S. Anna (Santana). Tehuantepec: Tehuantepec, Pilpa (?), and S. Pedro (?). Oaxaca: Tilapa (?), Oaxaca (Oaxaca City), and Alpisque (?). Vera Cruz (Veracruz): Alvarade (Alvarado), Vera Cruz (Veracruz), Cordova (Córdoba), Jalapa (Xalapa), Orizaba, Tuspan (Tuxpan), and Antonio (?). Puebla: Puebla (Puebla City) and Tehuacan (Tehuacán). Tamaulipas: Tampico, New Santander (Nuevo Santander was a region of Mexico before joining the Texas region in 1762), and Matamoros. The Bahamas: Nassau. United States of America: Florida: S. Augustine (St. Augustine) and Tampa. Louisiana: New Orleans. Texas: Austin and Galveston.
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Title
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Comitatus Namurci (1702)
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Date
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1702-01-01
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Summary
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This is a highly detailed copper engraved map of the area around Namur, Belgium. There is a mileage cartouche and a title cartouche. This is from the publication, Atlas portatif, ou, le nouveau theatre de la guerre en Europe: contenant les cartes geographiques, avec les plans des villas & fortresses les plus exposees aux revolutions presented: accompagne d'une nouvelle methode pour apprendre facilement la geographie & la chronologie des potentats. A Amsterdam Chez Daniel de la Feuille 1702, which roughly translates in English to, Portable Atlas, or, The New Theatre of War in Europe Containing Geographical Maps, with City Plans and Fortress Plans which are most Exposed to the Revolution Presented: Accompanied by a New Method to Easily Learn Geography and Chronology. In Amsterdam by Chez Daniel de la Feuille in 1702. The title of the map is Comitatus Namurci La Feuille excudit which roughly translates to County Namur Printed by La Feuille. Daniel de La Feuille lived from 1640 until 1709. He was from Sedan in Northern France and was born to Huguenot parents. In 1683, he and his family fled religious persecution to Amsterdam and became an engraver and cartographer. Cities appearing in the map: Belgium: Liège: Eynges (Engis), Floen (Flône), Aymoin (?), Herion (?), Fisfontaine (Fize-Fontaine), Ouhe (?), Vignamot (?), Feumal (Fumal), Falays (Fallais), Coutuin (?), Hosdain (Hosdent?), Breft (?), Mox (Moxhe), Aum (?), Crehe (Crehen), Haesche (Hannêche), Acache, Emptines, Messle, Ambesmeau, Chiple, Mouha, Coutuin, Han, Mozey, Haesche (Hannêche), Acache (Acosse), Meffle (Meeffe), Ambesmeau (Ambrésinaux), Chiple (?), Mouha (Moha), Coutuin (?), Han (?), Mozey (?), Namur: Braehan (Branchon), Fraquees (Franquenée), Tauiers (Taviers), Hettemot (?), Asche en refail (Aische-en-Refail), Gemblours (Gembloux), Conroy (Corroy-le-Château), Aurenault, Sombreff (Sombreffe), Ligny, Boegne (Boignée), Bagny (?), Mons (?), Hauere (?), Boety (Bothey), Tongre (Tongrinne), S. Martin (Saint-Martin), Masy (Mazy), Visne, Argenti (?), Meux, Fero (Ferooz), Tillon (?), Du (Dhuy), Liernu, Osltn (?), Mehaigne (Mehaigne/Noville-sur-Mehaigne), S. Denis (Saint-Denis-Bovesse), Esmynes (Émines), Chemen (?), Rime (?), Haule (?), Name (Namur), Le Faliec (?), Bernacome (?), Ponthy (?), Frize (?), Leuze, Dassoulx (?), Ypigney (Upigny), Franeqwarat (Franc-Waret), Fernemons (Fernelmont), Haure (?), Froncou (?), Nouille sur Mehaig (Noville-sur-Mehaigne), Boneff ab. (Boneffe/Boneffe Abbey), Recourt (?), Hambruie (Hambraine), Vodon (Cortil-Wodon), Emptines (Hemptinne), Forte Iles (?), Arz (?), Selles (Seilles), Malroy (?), Hingeon, Sosoy (?), Som (?), Naesche (Namêche), Ielhusee (?), Bonen (Boninne), Marche (Marche-les-Dames), Bez (Beez), Yanau (?), Florisont (Floreffe/Floriffoux), Iodion (Jodion), Templo (Temploux), Ymedame (?), Monslier (Moustier-sur-Sambre), Spy, Omme (?), Faume (?), Iemepye (Jemeppe-sur-Sambre), Tarsen (Tarcienne), Hansen (Hanzinne), Bersee (Berzée), Leneff (Laneffe), Thille Chast. (Thy-le-Château), Puy (?), Iardinet Abb. (?) Castre (Chastrès), Walcourt, Vogne (Vogenée), Yue (Yves-Gomezée), S. Aubain (Saint-Aubin), Dacheu (?), Iamuelle (Jamiolle), Viller Y Eglise (?), Philippeville, S. Zelle (?), Sauton (Sautour), Iamaigne (Jamagne), Waudesy (Vodecée), Franhimont (Franchimont), Louten (Lautenne), Hastiers (Hastière/Hastière-Lavaux/Hastière-par-delà), Wassers abb. (?), Poren (?), Minaoye (Miavoye), Maure (Maurenne), Frayers (Castle of Freÿr), Ierenne (?), Ante (Anthée), Moruille (Morville), Rosoy (Rosée), Florennes, Corenne, Forge (?), Walloon Brabant: Perwez, Threbaex (?), Gonensau (?), Pandese (?), Courtil (Cortil-Noirmont), Gemlines (Gentinnes), Viller (Villers-la-Ville), Houtham (?), Nivelle (Nivelles), Marbais, Hainaut: Petit Reulx (Petit-Rœulx-lez-Braine), Selle (Pont-à-Celles), Busee (Buzet), Renez (Rèves), Frane (Frasnes-lez-Gosselies), Liberche (Liberchies), Lut (Luttre), Brunehault (There is a street Chaussee Brunehault), Ville Paroy (?), Melle (Mellet), S. Amand (Saint-Amand), S. Bris (Brye), Wagny (Wangenies), Wauferche (Wanfercée-Baulet), Banley (?), Farse (Farciennes), Flerso (Fleurus), Telon (?), Chastelniau (Châtelineau), Charleroy (Charleroi), Gilly, Soreamol (Soleilmont), Heppenyes (Heppignies), Wagnelle (Wagnelée), Hegne (?), Gosseliers (Gosselies), Vinille (?), Plouy (?), Sartles moisni (Sartis), le Ron (?), Fonteineleuesque (Fontaine-l'Évêque), Marchien au pont (?), Gamigno (?), Court (?), Chastillan (Castillon), Cense (?), Bossu (?), Forge (?), Senlry (?), Conille (?), Acos (Acoz), Marcinelle (?), S. Nicolas (Sart Saint-Nicolas), Nalen (?), Gerpines (Gerpinnes), France: Alsace-Champagne-Ardenne-Lorraine: Ardennes: Charlemont (Charlemont fortress in Givet)
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Title
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Mexico and Central America (1853)
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Summary
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Detailed single page historical steel engraved map of Mexico and Central America published in 1853. This map depicts Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Belize, Mexico, and part of the United States. The map shows several geographic details on cities, towns, rivers, mountains, and islands. It measures 23.9cm by 29.3cm. Mexican States appearing on the Map: Yucatan (Yucatán, Quintana Roo, and Campeche), Tabasco, Chiapa (Chiapas), Oaxaca, Veracruz, Guerrero, La Puebla (Puebla), Mexico (Morelos, Mexico City, Hidalgo, Mexico, and Tlaxcala), Queretaro (Querétaro and San Luis Potosí), Michoacan (Michoacán and Guanajuato), San Luis Potosi (San Luis Potosí), Tamaulipas, Nueva Leon (Nuevo León), Colima, Jalisco (Jalisco and Nayarit), Zacatecas (Zacatecas and Aguascalientes), Durango, Coahuila, Cinaloa (Sinaloa), Chihuahua, Sonora, and Lower California (Baja California Sur). Cities appearing on this map include: Colombia: St. Martha (Santa Marta), Carthagena (Cartagena), and Tolu (Tolú). Panama: San Blas (San Blas Islands?), Aspinwall (Colón), Porto Bello (Portobelo), Chagres (Depopulated in 1916), Panama (Panama City), Parita, and Santiago (Santiago de Veraguas). Costa Rica: Cartago and San Jose (San José). Nicaragua: San Juan de Nicaragua or Grey Town, Blewfields (Bluefields), San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua (?), Grenada (Granada), Managua, Leon (León), Realejo (El Realejo), and Matagalpa. Honduras: Truxillo (Trujillo), Tegucigalpa, Comayagua, Choluteca, Sta. Barbara (Santa Bárbara), Omoa, and Copan (Copán). El Salvador: La Union (La Unión), San Salvador, Port Libertad (La Libertad), and Sonsonate. Guatemala: Port Istapa (Iztapa), Guatemala (Guatemala City), Isabel (Izabal), Coban (Cobán), and Quesaltenango (Quetzaltenango). Belize: Balize (Belize City) Mexico: Yucatan (Yucatán): Ichmul, Merida (Mérida), Uxmal, and Sisal. Quintana Roo: Arena (?), Balcalar (Bacalar), Campeche: Campeachy (Campeche), Champeton (Champotón), Victoria, and Laguna (Ciudad del Carmen?) Chiapa (Chiapas): Soconusco (Soconusco Region), Ciudad Real (?), and Palenque. Tabasco: Tabasco (?) Oaxaca: Oaxaca, Sta. Maria Petapa (Santa María Petapa), and Tehuantepec. Veracruz: Tuxtla (Santiago Tuxtla), Alvarado, Veracruz, Orizaba, Jalapa (Xalapa), and Tuspan (Tuxpan). Guerrero: Acapulco, Mescala (Mezcala), and Zacatula. La Puebla (Puebla): Tehuacan (Tehuacán) and La Puebla (Puebla). Mexico: Tescuco (Texcoco). Mexico City: Mexico City. Morelos: Cuernavaca. Hidalgo: Tula (Tula de Allende). Tlaxcala: Tlascala (Tlaxcala). Queretaro (Querétaro): Queretaro (Querétaro). San Luis Potosi (San Luis Potosí): Tancuahuitz (Tancanhuitz de Santos), Venado, S. Luis Potosi (San Luis Potosí), and Rio Verde (Rioverde). Michoacan (Michoacán): Patzcuaro (Pátzcuaro), Morelia, and Zamora Guanajuato: Leon (León) and Guanajuato. Tamaulipas, Victoria (Ciudad Victoria), Camargo (Ciudad Camargo), Matamoras (Matamoros), Soto la Marina, and Tampico. Nueva Leon (Nuevo León): Monterey (Monterrey). Colima: Colima (Colima City) and Guatlan (?). Jalisco: Natividad (Barra de Navidad), Autlan (Autlán), Zapotlan (Zapotitlán de Vadillo), Sayula, Guadalajara, and Lagos (Lagos de Moreno). Nayarit: Acaponeca (Acaponeta) and Tepic. Zacatecas: Tlaltenango (Tlaltenango de Sánchez Román Municipality), Sombrerete, Fresnillo, Zacatecas, and Pinos. Aguas Calientes (Aguascalientes): Aguas Calientes (Aguascalientes). Durango: Tamasula (Tamazula de Victoria), Guarisamey (?), Sta. Cruz (?), Papasquiaro (Santiago Papasquiaro), S. Juan del Rio (San Juan del Río), Durango, and Nombre de Dios. Coahuila: Parras, Alamo (?), Saltillo, Monclova, Santa Rosa (Santa Rosa de Múzquiz), San Vicente (Dismantled into the 1850s), and Guerrero. Cinaloa (Sinaloa): El Fuerte, Cinaloa (Sinaloa de Leyva), Culiacan (Culiacán), Cosala (Cosalá), and Mazatlan (Mazatlán). Chihuahua: Guadelupe (Guadalupe y Calvo), El Paso del Norte (Ciudad Juárez), Presidio del Norte (No longer in existence), Chihuahua (Chihuahua City), Sta. Cruz de Rozales (Santa Cruz de Rosales), Sta. Rozalia (Camargo), Sierra Rica (?), and Carriza (?). Sonora: Guilivis (No longer in existence), Alamo (Álamos), Guaymas, Pitic (Hermosillo), Ures, Orcasita (San Miguel de Horcasitas), Oposura (Moctezuma), and Fronteras. Lower California (Baja California Sur): La Paz and Loreto. United States of America: N. Orleans (New Orleans), Galveston, Tubac, and San Diego. A note in the Central America map states: The Panama Rail Road is 49 miles in length. It extends from Navy Bay to Panama on the Pacific. Populations for each country in 1853 are as follows: Costa Rica: 100,200 Nicaragua: 235,000 Grenada (Granada): 15,000 Leon (León): 35,000 Honduras: 310,000 Truxillo (Trujillo): 4,000 Tegucigalpa: 10,000 Comayagua: 12,000 El Salvador: 288,000 San Salvador: 16,000 Guatemala: 502,000 Guatemala City: 35,000 Belize: 11,100 Balize (Belize City): 3,000 Merida (Mérida): 15,000 Campeachy (Campeche): 9,000 Ciudad Real (?): 6,000 Tabasco (?): 7,000 Oaxaca: 25,000 Tehuantepec: 8,000 Alvarado: 1,500 Veracruz: 6,500 Orizaba: 15,000 Tehuacan (Tehuacán): 12,000 Mexico (Mexico City): 200,000 Tescuco (Texcoco): 5,000 Tlascala (Tlaxcala): 4,000 Queretaro (Querétaro): 50,000 Morelia: 18,000 Guanajuato: 40,000 Venado: 8,000 S. Luis Potosi (San Luis Potosí): 35,000 Victoria (Ciudad Victoria): 12,000 Matamoras (Matamoros): 10,000 Soto la Marina: 3,000 Tampico: 7,000 Monterey (Monterrey): 13,000 Colima (Colima City): 13,000 Autlan (Autlán): 4,000 Tepic: 10,000 Guadalajara: 50,000 Sombrerete: 7,000 Zacatecas: 30,000 Aguas Calientes (Aguascalientes): 8,000 Guarisamey (?): 4,000 Papasquiaro (Santiago Papasquiaro): 6,000 S. Juan del Rio (San Juan del Río): 12,000 Durango: 40,000 Parras: 17,000 Saltillo: 20,000 Guerrero: 1,000 Cinaloa (Sinaloa de Leyva): 9,500 Culiacan (Culiacán): 11,000 Mazatlan (Mazatlán): 1,500 Chihuahua (Chihuahua City): 15,000 Guaymas: 3,000 Pitic (Hermosillo): 8,000 Orcasita (San Miguel de Horcasitas): 2,500 Mexico: 7,662,000
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Title
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Carte De L'Empire Romain Sous Constantin, par A. H. Brue Geographe de S. A. R. Monsieuv. (1822)
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Date
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1822-01-01
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Summary
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This is a copper engraved map of Europe from 1822 by Adrien Hubert Brue. The title of the map is Carte generale de l'Empire Romain sous Constantin, par A.H. Brue, Geographe de S.A.R. Monsieur. A Paris, Chez l'Auteur, rue des Macons-Sorbonne, no. 9, et chez les principaux marchands de geographie. Janvier 1822. This roughly translates to General Map of the Roman Empire under Constantine, by A. H. Brue, Geographe S. A. R. sir. In Paris at Rue des Macons-Sorbonne, No. 9 and at major geography merchants. January 1822. Constantine the Great (272-337) was the Emperor of Rome from 306-337. Countries appearing on this map: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Libya, Jordan, Morocco, Algeria, Cities appearing on this map: Egypt: Apollinopolis Magna (Edfu), Syene (Aswan), Ombos (Naqada), Cataraetes (?), Pseleis (?), Berenice (Berenice Troglodytica abandoned in the 6th century), Hammon (?), Oasis Magna (Kharga Oasis), Latopolis (Esna), Hermunthis (Hermonthis), Thebae (Thebes, abandoned in the 1st Century), Apollinopolis Parva (Qus), Coptos (Qift), Tentyris (Dendera), Myosormos (Myos Hormos, abandoned after the 4th Century), Diospolis Parva (Hu), Abydus (Abydos, abandoned sometime after the 4th Century BC), Ptolemais (?), Chemmis vel Panopolis (Akhmim), Antaeopolis (Tjebu), Hypselis, Antinoe p. Besa (?), Hermopolis Magna (Hermopolis, abandoned sometime after the 3rd Century), Oasis Parva (Bahariya Oasis), Hepta (?), Oxyrynchus, Heracleopolis (Heracleopolis Magna, abandoned around 390), Arsinoe (Faiyum), Memphis (Abandoned in the 7th Century), Nomis (?), Aphroditopolis (Atfih), Clysma, Phaenicon (?), Pharan (Wadi Feiran), Apis, Paraetonium (Mersa Matruh), Derris extrema (?), Leucas Ptus. (?), Mareotis Lacus (Lake Mariout), Plinthinetes Sinus (Bay of Plinthine), Alexandria, Canopus (Abandoned sometime after 138 AD), Bolbitrium Ot. (Ancient Bolbitine Branch of the Nile), Bolbitine (Rosetta), Sais (Abandoned sometime after 525 BC), Sebennytus (Sebennytos which was abandoned sometime after the 3rd Century BC), Phatmeticum Ost. (Ancient Phatnitic branch of the Nile), Athribis (Abandoned sometime after the 4th Century AD), Heliopolis (Abandoned after the 6th Century AD), Bubastus (Bubastis which was abandoned after 449 AD), Heroopolis (Pithom which was abandoned sometime after the Roman era), Daphnes (?), Taphis (Abandoned sometime after 14 AD), Plusitum (?), Saudi Arabia: Iatrippa (Medina), Iambia (Yanbu), Madiana (?), Leuce (?), Phaemicon (?), Thumata (?), Magusa (?), Thaema (?), Negra (?), Libya: Garama (Germa), Augila (Awjila), Cydamus (Ghadames), Sabrata (Sabratha), Macomades Syrtis (?), Euphrantas Turris (?), Aspis Ptus. (?), Tubactis (?), Gerisa (Abandoned by the 11th Century), Oea vel Occa (Tripoli), Leptis Magna (Abandoned in the 7th Century), Darnis (Derna), Apollonia (Abandoned after 643), Cyrene (Abandoned in the 4th Century), Aplungis (?), Ptolemais (Abandoned in the 7th Century), Tauchira (Tocra), Hadriane (Deriana), Berenice (Benghazi), Axylis (?), Jordan: Aelana (Aqaba), Asiongaber (Ezion-Geber), Morocco: Adele (?), Cillaba (?), Fez, Volubilis (Abandoned by the 11th Century), Tremuli (?), Babba (?), Banasa (Iulia Valentia Banasa, abandoned around 285), Thamusida (Abandoned around 285), Sala (Chellah, abandoned in 1154), Exploratio ad Mercurium (?), Herpis (?), Algeria: Calaa (?), Mazices (?), Musalani (?), Desena (?), Vescerita vel Vescether (?), Tabudis (?), Tunisia: Pisida (?), Praesidium (?), Temp (?), Tacape (Gabès), Agiue Tu. (?), Thenae (Sfax), Taphrura (Sfax), Bizacina (?), Septimunica (?), Capsa (Gafsa), Telepte vel Tala (Thélepte), Tisurus (Tozeur), Libya Palus (?), Nepte (Nefta), Cyprus: Paphos,
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Title
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Carte Generale De Espagne es du Portugal Par A. H. Brue, Geographe de S. A. R. Mousieuv. (1821)
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Date
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1821-01-01
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Summary
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This is a copper engraved map of Spain and Portugal from 1821 by Adrien Hubert Brue. The title of the map is Carte generale de l'Espagne en du Portugal, par A.H. Brue, Geographe de S.A.R. Monsieur. A Paris, Chez l'Auteur, rue des Macons-Sorbonne, no. 9, et chez les principaux marchands de geographie. Decembre 1821. This roughly translates to General Map of Spain and Portugal, by A. H. Brue, Geographe S. A. R. sir. In Paris at Rue des Macons-Sorbonne, No. 9 and at major geography merchants. December 1821. Countries appearing on this map: Morocco, Spain, Great Britain, Portugal, Cities appearing on this map: Morocco: Arsila (Asilah), Tanger (Tangier), Tetuan (Tétouan), Spain: Autonomous City of Cueta: Cueta. Andalusia: Province of Huelva: Te. la Higuera (?), Province of Cádiz: Ceuta, Salinas (?), Chipiona, Rota, San Lucar (Sanlúcar de Barrameda), Bornos, Arcos (Arcos de la Frontera), Xeres (Jerez de la Frontera), Pto. de Sa. Maria (El Puerto de Santa María), Pto. Real (Puerto Real), Paterna (Paterna de Rivera), Alcala (Alcalá de los Gazules), Medinasidonia (Medina-Sidonia), Chiclana (Chiclana de la Frontera), Renalia (?), Conil (Conil de la Frontera), S. Carlos (?), Cadix (Cádiz), Te. Bernuja (?), Veger (Vejer de la Frontera), C. de Plata (?), Tarifa, Algeciras, S. Roque (San Roque), Ximena (Jimena de la Frontera), Ubrique, Setenil (Setenil de las Bodegas), Pta. Serrano (Puerto Serrano), Grasalema (Grazalema), Province of Seville: las Cabezas (Las Cabezas de San Juan), Te. de Oreas (?), Lebrija, la Real Ca. del Cuervo (El Cuervo de Sevilla), Pruna, Province of Málaga: Gaucin (Gaucín), Estepona, Marbella, Te. de Cala Moral (?), Co. Licata (?), Coin (Coín), Alhaurin (Alhaurín el Grande), Monda, Turon (?), Ronda, Alora (Álora), Te. de Cala Moral (La Cala de Mijas), Te. Frangerola (Fuengirola), Te. Molinos (Torremolinos), Almogia (Almogía), Malaga (Málaga), Velez Malaga (Vélez-Málaga), Pinos del Rey (?), Torros (Torrox), Province of Granada: Almunecar (Almuñécar), Salobrena (Salobreña), Motril, Velez (Vélez de Benaudalla), Lanjaron (Lanjarón), Orgiva (Órgiva), Torbiscon (Torvizcón), Gualchos, Ce. de Rabida (La Rábita), Busqotar (Busquístar), Ugijar (Ugíjar), Province of Almería: Adra, Berja, Ce. de Guardas Viejas (Castillo de Guardias Viejas/Los Baños de Guardias Viejas/Guardias Viejas), Dalias (Dalías), Almeria (Almería), Rioja, Nijar (Níjar/San Isidro de Níjar)), Te. S. Miguel (San Miguel de Cabo de Gata), Te. de Calafiguera (?), Great Britain: Gibraltar: Gibraltar Portugal: Algarve Region: Faro District: N. Sa. de la Luz (Praia da Luz), Carrapateira, Aljesur (Aljezur), Seixe (Odeceixe), Monchique, Alentejo Region: Beja District: Serdao (Cavaleiro), Villanova de Milfontes (Vila Nova de Milfontes), Setúbal District: Sines,
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Title
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Asia Minor (1851)
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Date
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1851-01-01
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Summary
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This is a steel engraved map of Asia Minor in 1851. It shows Cities, Towns, Rivers, Mountains, Lakes, and other features. John Tallis (1817–1876) was an English cartographic publisher. His company, John Tallis and Company, was in business in London from 1838 to 1851. Countries Shown on the map: Turkey, Greece, Cyprus, and Syria. Cities appearing on the map: Greece: Island of Scarpanto (Karpathos): Scarpanto (?), Avdemo (?), and Pt. Grado (?). Island of Rhodes: Kalavyah (Kattavia), M. Oros (?), Pyrgos (?), Lakanyah (Lachania), Lanathey (?), Polakah (Apolakkia), Skyanna (Siana), Phanes, Lindo (Lindos), Archangelo (Archangelos), Kalathease (Kalithies), and Rhodes. Island of Samos: Samos, Leka, and Courtotes (?). Island of Nicaria: Evthelo (Evdilos?). Island of Mytilene (Lesbos): Sigri, Liman (?), Arghena (?), Mytilene, and Scopelo (Skopelos). Island of Scio (Chios): Valisso (Volissos), Lethe (Lithi), and Kalamoti (Kalamoti). Cyprus: Stroumbi (Stroumpi), Baffa (Paphos), Carbouthi (?), Avdinio (Avdimou), Limesol (Limassol), Old Limesol (?), Pendasimo (?), Cormachitti (Kormakitis), Lapitho (Lapithos), Nicosia, Larnica (Larnaca), Cerina (?), Famagosta (Famagusta), Zdatilo (?), Amendra (?), Costro (?), and Haidar (?). Syria: Baneas (Baniyas), Jebili (Jableh), Ladikiyeh (Latakia), Serakheb (Saraqib), Emghir (?), Suriyeh (?), Herakleh (?), Rakkah (Al-Raqqah), Haji Wali (?), Toyhuk (?), Jinder Aba (?), Ak Deyavin (?), Tadef (Tedef), Meheritei (?), Hoilan (?), Aleppo, Carurabad (?), Safireh (As-Safira), and Sajur (?). Turkey: Davabourno (?), Vasilca (?), Boodroom (Bodrum), Melasso (Milas), Labrando (Labraunda), Heraclea (Herakleia), Demerjj Dere (?), Patinotiko (?), Samsoun (?), Scala Nuova (Kuşadası), Aiasaluck (Selçuk), Aidin Ghieuzel Hissar (Aydın), Claros, Cassab (Kasaba), Andiphilo (?), Suaret (?), Fornas (?), Patara, Yaloogie (?), Koonik (Kınık), Deuvar (?), Kousk (?), Ayvasil (?), Orahn (?), Makri (Fethiye), Oorloojah (?), Katra (?), Dollomon (Dalaman), Caunus (Kaunos), Keuygeeze (Köyceğiz), Olouboonar (?), Cagiolasolhucooe (?), Marmaras (Marmaris), Port Giova (Gökova), Moulinda (?), Almalee (Elmalı), Lekena (?), Yenibazar (Yenipazar), Chifteh Cafe (?), Nazeli (Nazilli), Arepas (?), Kuyuia (Kuyucak), Arrahchiflee (?), Kardsu (?), Yeerah (?), Cafe (?), Saraikieui (Sarayköy), Eski Hissar (?), Denizli, Yoomrhudas (?), Hoomarhoosarry (?), Pombuk Kaleli (Pamukkale), Chonas (?), Kaldele (?), Chardak (Çardak), Myra, Phineka (Finike), Artrasarny (Adrasan), Deliktash (?), Arycanda, Tekrova (Tekirova), Hameau (?), Adalia (Antalya), Laara (Now the District of Lara in Antalya), Bigikli (Bıyıklı), Stanisaw (?), Kara Punarkieui (?), Tshaltigshi (?), Allahsun (Ağlasun), Buldur (Burdur), Yazekieui (?), Isbarta (Isparta), Ketzi Borlou (Keçiborlu), Egerdir (Eğirdir), Kereli (Kireli), Bei Shehr (Beyşehir), Ptolemais (?), Alaya (Alanya), Silinty (?), Karadran (?), Chelindreh (Aydıncık), Selevke (Silifke), Mout (Mut), Ermenek, Sinana (?), Maiane (?), Karaman, Kizil Chesmeh (?), Ulisera (?), Cassaba (?), Chorla (?), Ak Chesha (Akçaşehir), Har Khan (?), Karabounar (Karapinar), Well (?), Well (?), Ismil (İsmil), Well (?), Elmasun (Güneysınır?), Katabothra (?), Isaura (Isauria), Kirogakieui (?), Koniyeh (Konya), Zillieh (?), Boghaz Kieui (?), Kara Bourja (?), Tris Maden (?), Kara Euran (Ortakaraören), Seidi Shehr (Seydişehir), Aufschar (?), Alan Buzuk (?), Eregli (Ereğli), Har Khan (?), Kayan (?), Bor, Nigdeh (Niğde), Kiz Hissar (?), Kolu Kushla (?), Ruined Khan (?), Guard Ho. (?), Barracks (?), Guard Ho. (?), Golek (Gülek), Mezarluk (?), Khan Vil (?), Vil (?), Adana, Ojivahli (?), Jakliguba (?), Sis, Yedezliy Kieui (?), Karasis (?), Pershendy (?), Lamas Vil. (?), Mezetli (Mezitli), Kara Hissar (?), Marsyn (Mersin), Koradouvar (?), Tarsus, Karadash Khan (Karataş), Misis (Mopsuestia), Kara Kapu (?), Ayas (Yumurtalık), Suadeiah (Samandağ), Kokson (Göksun), Belahlan (?), Marash (Kahramanmaraş), Dunkalat (?), Tartahli Koi (?), Kars (?), Urzin (?), Burnazsu (?), Yuzler (?), Boyas (?), Iskenderoon (İskenderun), Bogras (?), Sanamibli (?), Aliji (?), Aintab (Gaziantep), Arje (?), Port William (?), Eleisha (?), Andakia (Antakya), Diyar-Bekr (Diyarbakır), Severek (Siverek), Gergen Kaleh si (?), Hadro (?), Tornedah (?), Khantarah (?), Laro weran (?), Hoshun (?), Nahrlaga (?), Kerkunah (?), Oghegird (?), Somisat (?), Urfah (Şanlıurfa), Zibbili (?), Tel Jaffer (?), Tel Attchan (?), Harran, Kulleyuk (?), Arslan Tagh (?), Saruj (Suruç), Bireh jik (Birecik), Charmeli (?), Ruins (?), Adiyaman (Adıyaman), Pelvereh (Perre), Bur Konak (Börkenek), Besni, Haidli Bazar (?), Narsis (?), Zeklery Boser (?), New Troy (?), Old Troy (Troy), Alexandria (Alexandria Troas), Gura (Güre), Ichivna (?), Adraniytti (?), Sarkieup (?), Kareinkieui (Kareinkieui), Alvali (Ayvalık), Ayasmat (?), Kabakum, Pergamo (Bergama), Dekili Kieui (Dikili), Menimen (Menemen), Fouges (Phocaea), Smyrna, Vourla (Urla), Sahio (?), Murdovan (Mordoğan), Ritri (?), Latzaka (?), Soghajik (Seferihisar), Tourbali (Torbalı), Tyria (Tire), Bainder (Bayındır), Trianda (?), Ninfi (?), Cassaba (Turgutlu), Manisa, Ak Hissar (Akhisar), Kirkagatch (Kırkağaç), Bash Gelemba (?), Balikesri (Balıkesir), Umerkul (?), Meulver Kieui (?), Tash Kapou (Taşköprü), Kirmasli (?), Hdiz (?), Kefseut (?), Chiflik (?), Ahadj Hissar (?), Balat (?), Yeniji-kieui (?), Bogaditza (?), Singerli (?), Munyik (?), Ak Dagh (?), Assanler (Hasanlar), Kierkji (?), Selendi, Tefen (?), Kieui (?), Koula (Kula), Adala (?), Bin Tepeh (Bin Tepe), Sart (Sardis), Allah Sheher (Alaşehir), Aineh Ghieul (?), Sirghe (?), Aktash (?), Gueleri Kieui (?), Geuneh (Güney), Kelles (?), Debrent (?), Alamsalam (?), Bulladan (Buldan), Chindery (Cindere), Demirji-kieui (?), Seve-kieui (?), Yaessi-kieui (?), Alfachar (?), Ishekti (Çivril), Suleimanli (?), Canchas (?), Segicler (Selçikler), Sousous-kieui (Sousous), Yenisher Selendi (Yenişehir), Ushak (Uşak), Kieurkji (?), Gunenkieui (?), Yeni-kieui (Yenikent), Ghiediz (Gediz), Yeni-kieui (Gediz), Tchavdour (?), Chaji kieui (?), Gozuljah (?), Kargitash (?), Tauschanli (Tavşanlı), Mohimoul (?), Aineghuil (İnegöl), Turbeh (?), In Oghi (?), Eski Shehr (Eskişehir), Sarilar (Sarılar), Meulk (Mülkköy), Sevri Hissar (Sivrihisar), Sidi Ghazi (Seyitgazi), Kutahiyah (Kütahya), Taular (?), Altun Tash (Altıntaş), Morad Dagh (?), Usman(?), Alfiom Kara Hissar (Afyonkarahisar), Eski Kara Hissar (İscehisar?), Bolawadim (Bolvadin), Tshaktelu (?), Heraan Kaleh (?), Beiad (?), Geumek kieui (?), Hamza Hadji (?), Tchander (?), Germa, Bala Hissar (?), Barduklu (Bardakcı), Kara (?), Aslan (?), Sevin kieui (?), Saoran (?), Sandukli (Sandıklı), Deenair (Dinar), Olou Borlou (Uluborlu), Borlou (?), Yalobatch (Yalvaç?), Yeukler (?), Fn. of Midas (?), Arischar (?), Ak Hissar (?), Kani Aghatch (?), Ak Shehr (Akşehir), Arkut Khana (?), Pichankieui (?), Sarullas (?), Angora (Ankara), Yaila (?), Karghahli (Kargalı), Alif Ru (?), Kam Gedik (?), Juluk (?), Ingehsu (?), Hasan Oghlu (Hasanoğlan), Akserai (?), Sangor (?), Denek Madden (?), Banam (?), Karajiler (Karakeçili), Tol (?), Kurkli (Kırıklı), Kapa-keui (Köprüköy), Achmed (?), Sogher (?), Tash Kasman (Kaman), Kulu Kieui (Kulu), Arghun Kieui (?), Chukur Agha (?), Ilghun (Ilgın), Bedel Kaleb (?), Kadun Khaha (Kadınhanı), Ladik, Dedeler, Tuzla (?), Inya (?), In Avi (?), Iskil (Eskil), Sultan Khan (Sultanhanı), Adjem (?), Mousa Kouyou-su (?), Kodj Hissar (Şereflikoçhisar), Boghaz Kieui (Boğazköy), Sarai (?), Boghaz Kieui (Boğazkale), Nefezkieui (?), Yeuzgatt (Yozgat), Ingurly (?), Batal (?), Kislan (?), Kir Shehr (Kırşehir), Mujur (Mucur), Booslyan (Boğazlıyan), Aflok (?), Kurakum (?), Haji Kektash (Hacıbektaş), Yara-pason (?), Sari Karaman (Sarıkaraman), Taitor (?), Nenib Shehr (Nevşehir), Malagob (?), Ak Serai (Aksaray), Koyali (?), Helvar Dere (Helvadere), Sevri Hissar (Sivrihisar), Misli (?), Kara hissar (?), Ruined Khan (?), Develi, Injesu (İncesu), Kaisariyeh (Kayseri), Gomotch (?), Sultan Khan (?), Kalat Masman (?), Pallas (Palas), Sari Oghlan (Sarıoğlan), Gelermek (Gemerek), Arslan Toghmish (Arslandoğmuş), Zora (Zara), Yenijeh (Çimenyenice), Keimez (Dışkapı), Sivas, Aladja Khan (?), Kangol (Kangal), Derendah (Darende), Tanil (?), Manjutik (?), Gurum (Gürün), Karasaki (?), Chaherlasle (?), Tunuz (?), Abasilli (?), Setrek (?), Yenijah (?), Bostan (?), Sooey isury (?), Kara Kulak (?), Erzingan (Erzincan), Kemakh (Kemah), Hernemeh (?), Muselimo House (?), Devriki (?), Enden (?), Gemi Koi (?), Hoshmat (?), Palu, Egin (Kemaliye), Kharput (Elazığ), Kebban Maden (Keban), Arab-gir (Arapgir), Hakim Khan (Hekimhan), Tilkeh (?), Hogasur (Flooded by the creation of Lake Keban in 1974), Kizin (Gezin), Arghana Maden (Maden), Sardar Khan (?), Mezirah (?), Keumaur Khan (Kömürhan Bridge?), Fez Oglu (?), Gozeneh (Gözene), Sarghi (Sürgü), Malatia (Malatya), Arka (Akçadağ), Hassan Bedrik (?), Biga, Kazakti (?), Aidinjik (?), Erdek, Port Paillo (?), Ganos (Gaziköy), Kavatch (Kavakköy), Dunatika (?), Kamares (Kemer), Lampsacus (Lapseki), Burgas (?), Kippis Bouroun (Kepez), Abydos, Cas. of Europe (?), Bovalli Kallesci (?), Gallipoli, Enos (Enez), Agweh (Ağva), Mesjid Keui (?), Chileh (?), Ft. Kilios (?), Castles of Europe & Asian (Rumelihisarı and Anadoluhisarı), Pera (Now the district of Beyoğlu in Istanbul), Constantinople (Istanbul), Kntchuk Tchekmedje (Now the district of Küçükçekmece in Istanbul), Buyuk Tchekniedje (Now the district of Büyükçekmece in Istanbul), Silivri, Scutari (Now the district of Üsküdar in Istanbul), Fener Bagtche (Now the neighborhood of Fenerbahçe in Istanbul), Tuzla Kieui (Tuzla), Jarimdji (?), Izmid (İzmit), Dagirmon (?), Karamusal (Karamürsel), Ersek (Hersek), Bazarkiui (?), Iznik (İznik), Brusa (Bursa), Tartali (Tahtalı), Moudaniah (Mudanya), Yeniji Kieui (Yenikaraağaç), Ulubad (Uluabat), Karaoglankieu (Karaoğlan), Deblekieui (?), Zunguldaik (Zonguldak), Kara Bunar (Karapınar), Eregli (Karadeniz Ereğli), Pershembah (?), Shaurak (?), Alabli (Alaplı), Ak Kaya Kieui (Akkaya), Bayani (?), Akehah Shehr (?), Uskub (?), Duzchah (Düzce), Boli (Bolu), Tchagi (?), Milankaui (Melenağızı), Darikeui (Darıçayırı), Scheraf (?), Kerken Adasi (Kefken), Bahna (?), Ada Bazar (?), Khandak (?), Yarbasan (?), Armascha (?), Sabaniah (Sapanca), Kiwa (?), Terekli (Taraklı), Lefke (Osmaneli), Shughut (?), Kestabet (?), Nali Khan (Nallıhan), Kotchuk Kieui (?), Kalaijik (Kalecik), Akja Tash (?), Yayli (?), Akgharan (?), Kankiri (Çankırı), Olajik (?), Karaja Wiran (?), Tunai (?), Mironos (?), Arandi (?), Jighes (?), Eukban Aghiran (?), Jigher (?), Sahlun (?), Tcherkes (Çerkeş), Istanos (?), Kerede (Gerede), Hamanli (Hamamlı), Kastamuni (Kastamonu), Daurikan (?), Bakir Kureh si (Küre?), Chergora (?), Osmanziki (?), Bedil, Ayyanof Chilam (?), Araba Chila (?), Kara Binar (?), Zafaran Boli (Safranbolu), Naghzar (?), Dursanli (?), Ormah (?), Makin (?), Aramlah (?), Charmanli kieui (?), Filiyas (Filyos), Kizil Elmah (Kızılelma), Bartan (Bartın), Murad Bey (Muratbey), Amasserah (Amasra), Delikli Chileh (?), Kidros (?), Chideh (Cide), Uln Kereme (?), Fakoz (?), Meset (?), Kar Yani (?), Zarpana (Özlüce?), Ineboli (İnebolu), Ereni (?), Amasia (Amasya), Cauvsa (Havza?), Vizir Keuprr (Vezirköprü), Hadji Kieui (?), Aurhat Kieui (?), Khojanlik (?), Alajah (Alaca), Euyuk (Alaca Höyük), Tekiyeh Hatap (Çayhatap), Tchorum (Çorum), Mujteli (?), Osmanjik (Osmancık), Soungourli (Sungurlu), Chayan Kieui (?), Bayad (Bayat), Kurshal (?), Chai Kiui (?), Iskelib (İskilip), Tosia (Tosya), Korghi (Kargı), Durgan (?), Yuruk Yaylisi (?), Tash Kupri (Taşköprü), Iwalli (?), Arana (Abana), Stefanos (?), Kaza Kildi (Kazakyalisi?), Kaniza Kieui (?), Mehmet Bey (?), Boiavad (Boyabat), Amsoros (Amsoros Point?), Sinope (Sinop), Chobanlar (?), Gherseh (Gerze), Kousoufetova (?), Alatcham (Alaçam), Bafra, Douraan (Durağan), Chua (?), Cheltik (Çeltek), Omanagh Agbatsh (?), Isberde (?), Mellen (Mesudiye?), Isskassar (?), Bashichiflik (Başçiftlik), Ordu, Fatsa, Niksar, Denekse (?), Kuchuk Kouera (?), Herek (?), Kizil Chiflik (?), Gumenek Keupri (?), Tocat (Tokat), Boghaz Hissan Kaleh (?), Eamich (?), Thermeh (Terme), Tumulus (?), Korevli (?), Zilleh (Zile), Tourkhal (Turhal), Ladik, Charshambah (Çarşamba), Samsun, Kuru Balur (?), Koumjaas (?), Baibut (Bayburt), Balahor (?), Kerkit Chiftlik (?), Uleh Sheivan (?), Kara Hissar (Şebinkarahisar?), Kulei Hissar (?), Gumishkhana (Gümüşhane), Kerasun (Giresun), Tireboli (Tirebolu), Trebisonde (Trabzon), Givislik (?), Karakaban (Karakaban Dagi), Yanboli (?), and Kulensah (?).
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Title
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Map No. 2. United States (1853)
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Summary
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Detailed single page historical steel engraved map of Southern New England published in 1853. This map depicts Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and parts of New York, Vermont, and New Hampshire. The map shows several geographic details on cities, towns, rivers, mountains, and islands. Along the bottom edge is written: Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1853 by Daniel Burgess & Co in the Clerks office of the Southern District of New York. Cities appearing on the map: New York: Rye, New York (New York City), Singsing (Ossining), Bedford, Carmel, Cold Spring, Fishkill, Dover, Poughkeepsie, Hyde Park, Amenia, Copake, Hudson, Albany, Troy, and Eagle Bridge. Kings County: Brooklyn (Now one of the Five Boroughs of New York City) and Williamsburg (Now a neighborhood of Brooklyn and thus a neighborhood of New York City). Queens County (Queens County and Nassau County): Queens County: Jamaica (Now a neighborhood of New York City). Nassau County: N. Hempstead (North Hempstead), Hempstead, Oyster Bay, and Hicksville. Suffolk County: Huntington, Babylon, Smithtown, Setauket (Setauket-East Setauket), Patchogue, Riverhead, Southold, Greenport, Southampton, Sagg Harbor (Sag Harbor), and East Hampton. Connecticut: Fairfield County: Stamford, Norwalk, Fairfield, Ridgefield, Bridgeport, Danbury, Newton, Huntington (Shelton), Monroe, and Stratford. New Haven County: Middlebury, Oxford, Waterbury, Derby, Milford, Prospect, Cheshire, New Haven, Branford, Guilford, and Meriden. Litchfield County: Salisbury, Sharon, New Milford, Woodbury, Canaan, Cornwall, Litchfield, Colebrook, Winchester, Torrington, and Plymouth. Hartford County: Bristol, Hartland, Granby, Simsbury, Hartford, Farmington, Berlin, Wethersfield, Windsor, Suffield, E. Windsor (East Windsor), Glastonbury, Manchester, and Enfield. Middlesex County: Middle T. (Middletown), Chatham (East Hampton), Haddam, E. Haddam (East Haddam), Chester, Saybrook (Deep River), and Killingworth. New London: Lyme, New London, Groton, Montville, Salem, Norwich, Colchester, Bozrah, Franklin, Lebanon, Lisbon, Griswold, and Preston. Tolland County: Stafford, Tolland, Vernon, Bolton, and Mansfield. Windham County: Thompson, Woodstock, Pomfret, Ashford, Killingly, Brooklyn, Hampton, Canterbury, Plainfield, and Windham. Rhode Island: Washington County: Westerly, S. Kingston (South Kingstown), and N. Kingston (North Kingstown). Kent County: Coventry, Warwick, and E. Greenwich (East Greenwich). Providence County: Scituate, Cranston, Providence, Pawtucket, Gloucester, Smithfield, Woonsocket, and Slatersville. Bristol County: Bristol and Warren. Newport County: Newport, Portsmouth, and Tiverton. Massachusetts: Berkshire County: W. Stockbridge (West Stockbridge), Stockbridge, Sheffield, Williamstown, Lanesboro (Lanesborough), Lenox, Great Barrington, Lee, Pittsfield, and Adams. Hampden County: Tolland, Southwick, Westfield, Chester, Ludlow, Chicopee, and Springfield. Hampshire County: Chesterfield, Northampton, Southampton, Hatfield, Amherst, Hadley, S. Hadley (South Hadley), and Ware. Franklin County: Ashfield, Coleraine (Colrain), Greenfield, Deerfield, Barnards T. (Bernardston), Montague, Sunderland, Northfield, and Wendell. Worcester County: Ashburnham, Lunenburg, Westminster, Fitchburg, Lancaster, Petersham, Rutland, Barre, Boylston, Brookfield, Worcester, Grafton, Westboro (Westborough), Milbury (Millbury), Oxford, Charlton, Sturbridge, Southbridge, Uxbridge, and Blackstone. Middlesex County: Townsend, Dunstable, Groton, Chelmsford, Lowell, Concord, Stow, Marlboro (Marlborough), Billerica, Reading, Medford, Lexington, Cambridge, Waltham, Newton, Natick, and Hopkinton. Essex County: Amesbury, Newburyport, Bradford, Haverhill, Ipswich, Gloucester, Danvers, Salem, Topsfield, Andover, Lawrence, Marblehead, and Lynn. Suffolk County: Chelsea, Charlestown (Now a neighborhood of Boston), Boston, Dorchester (Now a neighborhood of Boston), and Roxbury (Now a neighborhood of Boston). Norfolk County: Dedham, Medford, Medway, Wrentham, Foxboro (Foxborough), Stoughton, Randolph, Quincy, Weymouth, and Cohasset. Bristol County: Mansfield, Attleboro, Seekonk, Fall River, Dighton, Norton, Taunton, Westport, and New Bedford. Plymouth County: Hingham, Scituate, Marshfield, W. Bridgewater (West Bridgewater), Duxbury, Plymouth, Bridgewater, Middleboro (Middleborough), Carver, Wareham, and Rochester. Barnstable County: Sandwich, Falmouth, Barnstable, Yarmouth, Brewster, Chatham, Orleans, Wellfleet, Truro, and Provincetown. Dukes County: Tisbury and Edgartown. Nantucket: Nantucket. Vermont: Bennington, Bellows Falls, and Brattleboro. New Hampshire: New Ipswich, Concord, Nashua, Manchester, Dover, and Portsmouth. Populations shown on the map: New York (New York City): 515,500 Brooklyn (Now one of the Five Boroughs of New York City): 97,000 Williamsburg (Now a neighborhood of Brooklyn and thus a neighborhood of New York City): 30,750 Jamaica (Now a neighborhood of New York City): 4,250 N. Hempstead (North Hempstead): 4,000 Hempstead: 7,500 Oyster Bay: 7,000 Huntington: 7,500 Smithtown: 2,000 Riverhead: 2,500 Southold: 4,750 Southampton: 6,500 Sagg Harbor (Sag Harbor): 2,500 East Hampton: 2,000 Poughkeepsie: 14,000 Stamford: 5,000 Norwalk: 4,750 Fairfield: 3,500 Ridgefield: 2,250 Danbury: 6,000 Newton: 3,250 Huntington (Shelton): 1,250 Monroe: 1,500 Stratford: 2,000 Middlebury: 750 Oxford: 1,500 Waterbury: 5,250 Derby: 2,750 Milford: 2,500 Salisbury: 3,000 Sharon: 2,500 New Milford: 4,500 Woodbury: 2,250 Canaan: 2,750 Cornwall: 2,000 Litchfield: 4,000 Colebrook: 1,250 Winchester: 1,500 Torrington: 2,000 Plymouth: 2,500 Bristol: 3,000 Prospect: 750 Cheshire: 1,500 New Haven: 20,000 Branford: 1,500 Guilford: 2,750 Meriden: 3,500 Hartland: 1,750 Granby: 2,500 Simsbury: 2,750 Hartford: 18,000 Farmington: 2,750 Berlin: 1,750 Wethersfield: 2,500 Windsor: 3,250 Suffield: 2,500 E. Windsor (East Windsor): 2,500 Glastonbury: 3,500 Manchester: 2,500 Enfield: 4,500 Middle T. (Middletown): 8,500 Chatham (East Hampton): 1,500 Haddam: 2,250 E. Haddam (East Haddam): 2,500 Chester: 1,000 Saybrook (Deep River): 3,750 Killingworth: 1,000 Lyme: 2,250 New London: 9,000 Groton: 3,750 Montville: 2,000 Salem: 1,000 Norwich: 10,250 Colchester: 2,000 Bozrah: 1,000 Franklin: 1,000 Lebanon: 2,000 Lisbon: 1,000 Griswold: 2,000 Preston: 1,750 Stafford: 3,000 Tolland: 1,500 Vernon: 1,500 Bolton: 750 Mansfield: 2,250 Thompson: 4,500 Woodstock: 3,500 Pomfret: 1,750 Ashford: 1,250 Killingly: 4,500 Brooklyn: 1,500 Hampton: 1,000 Canterbury: 1,750 Plainfield: 2,750 Windham: 4,500 Connecticut: 371,000 Westerly: 2,750 S. Kingston (South Kingstown): 3,750 N. Kingston (North Kingstown): 3,000 Coventry: 3,500 Warwick: 7,750 E. Greenwich (East Greenwich): 2,250 Rhode Island: 148,000 Scituate: 4,500 Cranston: 4,500 Providence: 41,500 Pawtucket: 2,000 Gloucester: 2,750 Smithfield: 11,500 Bristol: 1,500 Newport: 8,500 Portsmouth: 1,750 Tiverton: 4,750 Hudson: 6,250 Albany: 50,750 Troy: 28,750 W. Stockbridge (West Stockbridge): 1,750 Stockbridge: 2,000 Sheffield: 2,750 Williamstown: 2,750 Lanesboro (Lanesborough): 1,250 Lenox: 1,500 Great Barrington: 3,250 Lee: 3,250 Pittsfield: 5,750 Adams: 6,250 Tolland: 500 Southwick: 1,000 Westfield: 4,250 Chester: 1,500 Ludlow: 1,750 Chicopee: 8,250 Springfield: 11,750 Chesterfield: 1,000 Northampton: 5,250 Southampton: 5,250 Hatfield: 1,000 Amherst: 3,000 Hadley: 2,000 S. Hadley (South Hadley): 2,500 Ware: 3,750 Ashfield: 1,500 Coleraine (Colrain): 1,750 Greenfield: 2,500 Deerfield: 1,500 Barnards T. (Bernardston): 1,000 Montague: 1,500 Sunderland: 750 Northfield: 1,750 Wendell: 1,000 Massachusetts: 994,000 Ashburnham: 2,000 Lunenburg: 1,250 Westminster: 2,000 Fitchburg: 5,000 Lancaster: 1,750 Petersham: 1,500 Rutland: 1,000 Barre: 3,000 Boylston: 1,250 Brookfield: 1,500 Worcester: 17,250 Grafton: 4,000 Westboro (Westborough): 2,250 Milbury (Millbury): 3,000 Oxford: 3,500 Charlton: 2,000 Sturbridge: 2,000 Southbridge: 2,750 Uxbridge: 2,500 Townsend: 2,000 Dunstable: 500 Groton: 2,500 Chelmsford: 2,000 Lowell: 33,500 Concord: 2,250 Stow: 1,500 Marlboro (Marlborough): 3,000 Billerica: 1,750 Reading: 3,000 Medford: 3,750 Lexington: 2,000 Cambridge: 15,250 Waltham: 4,500 Newton: 5,000 Natick: 2,750 Hopkinton: 2,750 Amesbury: 3,250 Newburyport: 9,500 Bradford: 1,250 Haverhill: 6,000 Ipswich: 3,750 Gloucester: 7,750 Danvers: 8,000 Salem: 20,250 Topsfield: 1,250 Andover: 7,000 Lawrence: 8,250 Marblehead: 6,250 Lynn: 14,250 Chelsea: 6,750 Charlestown (Now a neighborhood of Boston): 17,250 Boston: 136,750 Dorchester (Now a neighborhood of Boston): 8,000 Roxbury (Now a neighborhood of Boston): 18,750 Dedham: 4,500 Medfield: 1,000 Medway: 2,750 Wrentham: 3,000 Foxboro (Foxborough): 2,000 Stoughton: 3,500 Randolph: 4,750 Quincy: 5,000 Weymouth: 5,250 Cohasset: 1,750 Mansfield: 1,750 Attleboro: 4,500 Seekonk: 2,250 Fall River: 11,500 Dighton: 1,750 Norton: 1,750 Taunton: 10,500 Westport: 2,750 New Bedford: 16,500 Hingham: 4,000 Scituate: 2,250 Marshfield: 1,750 W. Bridgewater (West Bridgewater): 1,000 Duxbury: 2,750 Plymouth: 6,000 Bridgewater: 2,750 Middleboro (Middleborough): 5,250 Carver: 1,250 Wareham: 3,250 Rochester: 3,750 Sandwich: 4,250 Falmouth: 2,500 Barnstable: 5,000 Yarmouth: 2,500 Brewster: 1,500 Chatham: 2,500 Orleans: 1,750 Wellfleet: 2,500 Truro: 2,000 Provincetown: 3,250 Tisbury: 1,750 Edgartown: 2,000 Nantucket: 8,000 The map also states that the distance between Boston and London is 3,430 miles.
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Le Fort de la Kenoque. Situè dans la Comte de Flandre, sur la petite Riviere d'Yser a une Lieue au Sud Ouest de Dixmude. (1702): Fort of Kenoque. Seated in the County of Flanders, on the small river Yser in Lieue southwest of Diksmuide.
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This is a copper engraved plate depicting a bird's-eye plan of the fortress of Kenoque situated at the junction of the Loo and Diksmuide canals besieged by the British in 1695. The engraving shows details of the improvements to the fortress proposed by Vauban. The fortress was demolished in 1781. The publication this is from is Atlas portatif, ou, le nouveau theatre de la guerre en Europe: contenant les cartes géographiques, avec les plans des villes & forteresses les plus exposées aux révolutions présentes: accompagnè d'une nouvelle méthode pour apprendre facilement la géographie & la chronologie des potentats. Translated this is roughly: Portable Atlas, or thé new theater of war in Europe: containing maps, city maps with forts & most exposer to these revolutions: accompanied by a new method to easily learn geography & timelines. It was published in Amsterdam, Netherlands by Daniel de la Feuille in 1702. Daniel was born of Huguenot stock in Sedan (L'Ardennes) France. As a young man, he apprenticed as a watchmaker. In 1663 La Feuille married Charlette Marlet, the daughter of a local carpenter. Twenty years later, in 1683, facing religious persecution of the Huguenots in France, the family fled to Amsterdam. By 1686, Daniel had become a burgher (citizen) of the city and established himself as an engraver, publisher, and art dealer. Not long after, in 1691, he was admitted into the Booksellers Guild. His cartographic work includes numerous individual maps and atlases, many of which continued to be published and republished well after his death in 1709. He was succeeded by his sons Jacob and Paul.
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Central Europe (1853)
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Detailed single page historical steel engraved map of Southern New England published in 1853. This map depicts Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and parts of New York, Vermont, and New Hampshire. The map shows several geographic details on cities, towns, rivers, mountains, and islands. Along the bottom edge is written: Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1853 by Daniel Burgess & Co in the Clerks office of the Southern District of New York. Countries appearing on map: Greece, Ionian Islands (Greece), Turkey (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Austria-Hungary (Croatia, Italy, Serbia, Slovenia), Naples (Italy), States of the Church (Italy), Tuscany (Italy), Spain, Gibraltar, Portugal, France, San Marino, Tuscany (Italy), Lucca (Italy), Modena (Italy), Parma (Italy), Sardinian States (Italy) Cities appearing on the map: Greece: Capsali (Kapsali), Mistra (Mystras), Navarino (Pylos), Arcadia (?), Tripolitza (Tripoli), Napoli (Nafplio), Corinth, Patras, Marathon, Athens, Negropont (Chalcis), Livadia (Livadeia), Zeitoun (Lamia), Lepanto (Naupactus), and Missalonghi (Missolonghi). Ionian Islands (Greece): Zante (Zakynthos), Lixuri (Lixouri), Argostola, and Corfu. Naples (Italy): Termoli, Gaeta, Naples, Salerno, Pescara, Ortona, and Aquila (L'Aquila). States of the Church (Italy): Rome, Terracina, Civita Vecchia (Civitavecchia), Perugia, Urbino, Fermo, Loreto, Ancona, Ferrara, Ravenna, Rimina (Rimini), and Bologna. Spain: Carthagena (Cartagena), Vera, Granada, Malaga (Málaga), Cordova (Córdoba), Seville, Cadiz (Cádiz), Palos (Palos de la Frontera), Palma, Valencia, Alicante, Ciudad Real, Murcia, Toledo, Almaden (Almadén), Badajos (Badajoz), Barcelona, Tarragona, Tortosa, Saragossa (Zaragoza), Madrid, Valladolid, Salamanca, Urgel (La Seu d'Urgell), Pamplona, Bilbao, Santander, Gijon (Gijón), Oviedo, Leon (León), Corunna (A Coruña), and Santiago (Santiago de Compostela). Gibraltar: Gibraltar. Portugal: Faro, Lagos, Sines, Abrantes, Evoro (Évora), Leira (Leiria), Lisbon, Coimbria (Coimbra), Oporto (Porto), and Valenca (Valença). France: Bayonne and Strasburg (Strasbourg). Turkey (Bosnia and Herzegovina): Bosnaserai (Sarajevo), Mostar, Uzitza (?), Kupris, Bamaluka (Banja Luka), and Gradiska (Gradiška). Austria-Hungary (Croatia, Italy, Serbia, Slovenia, Hungary, Austria, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Poland): Croatia: Spalatro (Split), Esseck (Osijek), Posega (Požega), Agram (Zagreb), Zara (Zadar), Segna (Senj), Fiume (Rijeka), Carlstadt (Karlovac), Umago (Umag), Rovigno (Rovinj), Kopremitz (Koprivnica), and Kottori (Kotoriba). Italy: Trieste, Padua, Venice, Roveredo (Rovereto), Brescia, Mantua, Verona, Vicenza, Bergamo, Como, MIlan, Belluno, Gorizia, Botzen (Bolzano), Trent (Trento), and Brixen. Serbia: Peterwardin (Petrovaradin) and Sombor. Slovenia: Neustadt (Novo Mesto), Laybach (Ljubljana), Marburg (Maribor), and Cilly (Celje). Hungary: Buda (Western part of Budapest), Pesth (Eastern part of Budapest), Kalocsa, Kormund (Körmend), Lovo (Zalalövő?), Raab (Győr), and Vesprin (Veszprém). Austria: Neustadt (Wiener Neustadt), Clagenfurth (Klagenfurt), Murau, Leitzen (Liezen), Weyer, Gratz (Graz), Leoben, Lien (Lienz), Werfen (Werfenweng), Saltzburg (Salzburg), Radstadt, Imst, Innspruck (Innsbruck), Pludenz (Bludenz), Vienna, Lintz (Linz), Grein, Zwettel (Zwettl), and Mautern (Mautern an der Donau). Slovakia: Schemnitz (Banská Štiavnica), Neusohl (Banská Bystrica), Presburg (Bratislava), and Leopoldstad (Leopoldov). Czech Republic: Teschen (Split into Cieszyn, Poland on the East bank of the Olza River and Český Těšín, Czech Republic on the West bank of the Olza River), Austerlitz (Slavkov u Brna), Brunn (Brno), Olmutz (Olomouc), Troppau (Opava), Czaylau (?), Seltschan (Sedlčany), Pisek (Písek), Tabor (Tábor), Budweis (České Budějovice), Iglau (Jihlava), Pilsen (Plzeň), Klattau (Klatovy), Toepel (Teplá), Gabel (Jablonné v Podještědí), Gitschin (Jičín), Koeniggratz (Hradec Králové), Prague, Eger (Cheb), Saatz (Žatec), and Sedlitz (Korozluky). Poland: Teschen (Split into Cieszyn, Poland on the East bank of the Olza River and Český Těšín, Czech Republic on the West bank of the Olza River) and Cracow (Kraków). San Marino: San Marino. Tuscany (Italy): Arezzo, Siena, Piombino, Leghorn, Florence, and Pisa. Lucca (Italy): Lucca. Modena (Italy): Modena and Reggio (Reggio Emilia). Parma (Italy): Parma, Carrara, Massa, and Piacenza. Sardinian States (Italy and France): Italy: Vercelli, Padua (Pavia), Allessandria (Alessandria), Genoa, Aosta, Ivrea, Turin, Susa, Saluzzo, and Mondovi (Mondovì). France: Chambery (Chambéry). Bavaria (Germany): Weilheim (Weilheim in Oberbayern), Amberg, Ratlsbon (Regensburg?), Deggendorf, Passau, Landshut, Wasserburg (Wasserburg am Inn), Wurtzburg (Würzburg), Bamberg, Erlangin (Erlangen), Nuremberg, Anspack (Ansbach), Ingoldstadt (Ingolstadt), Augsburg, Munich, and Schweinfurt. Switzerland: Puseniavo (Poschiavo), Schaffhausen, Luzerne (Lucerne), Zurich (Zürich), Geneva, Neuchatel (Neuchâtel), Lausanne, Soleure (Solothurn), Berne (Bern), and Basle (Basel). Baden (Germany): Constance (Konstanz), Freyburg (Freiburg im Breisgau), Saar Louis (Saarlouis), Treves (Trier), Manhelin (Mannheim), Heidelburg (Heidelberg), Carlsruhe (Karlsruhe), Baden (Baden-Baden), and Darmstadt. Wirtemburg (Germany): Stuttgard (Stuttgart), Ulm, Esslingen (Esslingen am Neckar), Elwangen (Ellwangen), Heilbron (Heilbronn), and Halle (Schwäbisch Hall). Hesse-Darmstadt (Germany): Mentz (Mainz), Marburg, Geissen (Giessen), Frankfort (Frankfurt), and Homburg (Bad Homburg vor der Höhe). Hohenzollern (Germany): Hechingen, Rentlingen (Riedlingen), and Sigmaringen. Prussia (Rhine (Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany), Silesia (Poland and Germany), Westphalia (Germany), Brandenburg (Germany and Poland), and Pomerania (Germany and Poland), Germany) Rhine (Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany): Belgium: Bastogne. Luxembourg: Luxemburg (City of Luxembourg). Germany: Cologne, Aix la Chappelle (Aachen), Bonn, and Coblentz (Koblenz). Silesia (Poland and Germany): Poland: Ratibor (Racibórz), Oppeln (Opole), Neisse (Nysa), Breslau (Wrocław), Liegnitz (Legnica), Steinau (Ścinawa), and Glogau (Głogów). Germany: Huska (Bad Muskau?). Westphalia (Germany): Detmold, Wesel, Essen, Dusendorf (Düsseldorf), Arensburg (Arnsberg), Elberfeld (Now a subdivision of Wuppertal), and Munster (Münster). Brandenburg (Germany and Poland): Germany: Wittenberg, Herzburg (Herzberg), Frankfort on Oder (Frankfurt), Beltzig (Bad Belzig), Brandenburg (Brandenburg an der Havel), Berlin, Potsdam, Lenzen, Salzwedel, and Magdeburg. Poland: Custrin (Kostrzyn nad Odrą) and Soldin (Myślibórz). Pomerania (Germany and Poland): Germany: Anclam (Anklam), Stralsund, and Bergen (Bergen auf Rügen). Poland: Stettin (Szczecin), Stargard (Stargard Szczeciński), Wollin (Wolin), Butow (Bytów), and Colberg (Kołobrzeg). Saxony (Germany): Bautzen, Altenburg, Leipsic (Leipzig), Meissen, Dresden, Freyburg, Schliez (Schleiz), and Lobenstein (Bad Lobenstein). Reuss-Greiz (Germany): Greiz. Anhalt-Bernburg (Germany): Cothen (Köthen). Hanover (Germany): Dessau, Eisenach, Weimar, Gotha, Jena, Brunswick (Braunschweig), Lunenburg (Lüneburg), Hanover, Soltau, Bremen, Cuxhaven, Osnaburg (Osnabrück), and Embden (Emden). Saxe Coburg Gotha (Germany): Coburg. Scharzburg Sondershausen (Germany): Saudershausen (Sondershausen). Waldeck (Germany): Arolsen (Bad Arolsen) and Waldeck. Heese Cassel (Germany): Cassel (Kassel), Fulda, and Hanau. Nassau (Germany): Wisbaden. Netherlands: Arnheim (Arnhem), Breda, Bergen op Zoom, Rotterdam, The Hague, Groningen, Zwolle, Amsterdam, Helder (Den Helder), Utrecht, and Leeuwarden. Belgium (Belgium and Netherlands): Belgium: Liege (Liège), Namur, Antwerp, Waterloo, Brussels, Ghent, Tournay (Tournai), Bruges, and Ostend. Netherlands: Maestrich (Maastricht). Russia (Poland): Posen (Poznań). Mecklenburg Schwerin (Germany): Parchia (Parchim), New Strelitz (Neustrelitz), Wismar, Schwerin, and Rostock. Denmark (Holstein, Germany): Lubeck (Lübeck), Gluekstadt (Glückstadt), Altona (Now a borough of Hamburg), Hamburg, Kiel, and Rendsburg. Oldenburg (Germany): Oldenburg and Kniphausen (Wilhelmshaven). Populations shown on the map: Capsali (Kapsali): 14,500 Navarino (Pylos): 2,000 Arcadia (?): 4,000 Napoli (Nafplio): 14,000 Corinth: 2,000 Patras: 10,000 Athens: 31,000 Lepanto (Naupactus): 3,000 Missalonghi (Missolonghi): 4,000 Greece: 1,100,000 Ionian Islands (Greece): 220,000 Zante (Zakynthos): 20,000 Lixuri (Lixouri): 6,000 Argostola (Argostoli): 5,000 Corfu: 25,000 Naples (Italy): 8,704,500 Gaeta: 16,000 Naples: 100,750 Salerno: 12,000 Rome: 184,000 Terracina: 8,000 Carthagena (Cartagena): 37,000 Granada: 80,000 Malaga (Málaga): 52,000 Cordova (Córdoba): 60,000 Seville: 91,000 Cadiz (Cádiz): 70,000 Gibraltar: 20,000 Faro: 8,500 Lagos: 9,000 Sines: 1,250 Palma: 34,000 Valencia: 66,000 Alicante: 25,000 Ciudad Real: 8,000 Murcia: 36,000 Toledo: 16,000 Almaden (Almadén): 10,000 Badajos (Badajoz): 13,000 Spain: 14,216,500 Abrantes: 5,000 Evoro (Évora): 9,000 Leira (Leiria): 2,000 Lisbon: 280,000 Barcelona: 150,000 Tarragona: 12,000 Tortosa: 11,000 Saragossa (Zaragoza): 50,000 Madrid: 207,000 Valladolid: 21,000 Salamanca: 15,000 Coimbria (Coimbra): 15,000 Oporto (Porto): 80,000 Bilbao: 15,000 Santander: 25,000 Gijon (Gijón): 6,000 Oviedo: 10,000 Leon (León): 6,000 Corunna (A Coruña): 22,000 Bosnaserai (Sarajevo): 60,000 Mostar: 10,000 Spalatro (Split): 9,000 Pescara: 3,000 Ortona: 6,000 Aquila (L'Aquila): 14,000 Civita Vecchia (Civitavecchia): 9,500 Perugia: 32,000 Urbino: 14,000 Fermo: 20,000 Loreto: 8,000 Ancona: 32,000 States of the Church: 2,898,200 San Marino: 8,250 Tuscany (Italy): 1,778,000 Arezzo: 9,500 Siena: 91,000 Piombino: 1,000 Leghorn: 88,000 Florence: 105,000 Pisa: 21,000 Lucca (Italy): 182,000 Lucca: 25,000 Peterwardin (Petrovaradin): 6,500 Sombor: 22,500 Esseck (Osijek): 12,500 Posega (Požega): 5,000 Agram (Zagreb): 20,000 Zara (Zadar): 7,000 Fiume (Rijeka): 11,000 Carlstadt (Karlovac): 7,000 Rovigno (Rovinj): 11,000 Trieste: 76,000 Lombardy: 5,007,500 Padua: 52,000 Venice: 120,000 Ferrara: 28,000 Ravenna: 26,000 Rimina (Rimini): 18,000 Bologna: 75,000 Roveredo (Rovereto): 8,000 Brescia: 28,000 Mantua: 28,000 Verona: 52,000 Vicenza: 33,000 Modena (Italy): 586,500 Modena: 28,000 Reggio (Reggio Emilia): 19,000 Parma (Italy): 503,000 Parma: 41,000 Carrara: 8,500 Massa: 10,000 Piacenza: 30,000 Bergamo: 32,000 Como: 12,000 MIlan: 205,000 Vercelli: 19,500 Padua (Pavia): 24,500 Allessandria (Alessandria): 46,000 Genoa: 120,000 Aosta: 7,000 Ivrea: 8,5000 Turin: 135,000 Susa: 3,500 Saluzzo: 15,000 Mondovi (Mondovì): 16,5000 Chambery (Chambéry): 18,500 Sardinian States (Italy): 4,916,500 Hungary: 11,017,000 Buda (Western part of Budapest): 45,000 Pesth (Eastern part of Budapest): 90,000 Kalocsa: 8,250 Austria-Hungary: 36,515,000 Neustadt (Wiener Neustadt): 12,000 Raab (Győr): 18,000 Laybach (Ljubljana): 19,000 Marburg (Maribor): 6,250 Clagenfurth (Klagenfurt): 13,000 Gratz (Graz): 5,000 Belluno: 12,000 Gorizia: 9,5000 Saltzburg (Salzburg): 13,000 Botzen (Bolzano): 9,000 Trent (Trento): 15,000 Brixen: 3,500 Innspruck (Innsbruck): 14,000 Weilheim (Weilheim in Oberbayern): 2,500 Schaffhausen: 7,500 Luzerne (Lucerne): 8,500 Zurich (Zürich): 16,000 Constance (Konstanz): 7,000 Switzerland: 2,390,200 Freyburg (Freiburg im Breisgau): 14,500 Geneva: 31,000 Neuchatel (Neuchâtel): 6,250 Lausanne: 16,000 Soleure (Solothurn): 4,500 Berne (Bern): 24,000 Basle (Basel): 3,000 Teschen (Split into Cieszyn, Poland on the East bank of the Olza River and Český Těšín, Czech Republic on the West bank of the Olza River): 7,500 Vienna: 429,500 Presburg (Bratislava): 45,000 Austerlitz (Slavkov u Brna): 3,250 Brunn (Brno): 42,000 Olmutz (Olomouc): 18,250 Troppau (Opava): 14,000 Lintz (Linz): 25,000 Budweis (České Budějovice): 8,250 Iglau (Jihlava): 16,000 Pilsen (Plzeň): 10,000 Amberg: 11,000 Ratlsbon (Regensburg?): 22,000 Passau: 11,000 Landshut: 13,250 Wurtzburg (Würzburg): 27,500 Bamberg: 21,500 Erlangin (Erlangen): 11,000 Nuremberg: 48,000 Anspack (Ansbach): 13,000 Ingoldstadt (Ingolstadt): 10,250 Augsburg: 38,000 Munich: 115,000 Stuttgard (Stuttgart): 46,000 Ulm: 18,500 Elwangen (Ellwangen): 3,750 Heilbron (Heilbronn): 11,750 Halle (Schwäbisch Hall): 6,750 Saar Louis (Saarlouis): 7,500 Treves (Trier): 20,000 Manhelin (Mannheim): 23,750 Carlsruhe (Karlsruhe): 24,750 Baden (Baden-Baden): 6,250 Darmstadt: 31,000 Mentz (Mainz): 34,000 Luxemburg (City of Luxembourg): 12,000 Cracow (Kraków): 37,000 Ratibor (Racibórz): 8,000 Silesia: 3,065,000 Oppeln (Opole): 8,000 Neisse (Nysa): 16,500 Breslau (Wrocław): 112,750 Liegnitz (Legnica): 14,250 Steinau (Ścinawa): 2,750 Glogau (Głogów): 14,750 Bautzen: 11,000 Koeniggratz (Hradec Králové): 8,000 Prague: 114,000 Eger (Cheb): 10,000 Greiz: 7,000 Altenburg: 15,000 Leipsic (Leipzig): 60,000 Meissen: 8,250 Dresden: 85,250 Dessau: 12,500 Wittenberg: 11,250 Coburg: 10,000 Eisenach: 10,000 Weimar: 12,000 Gotha: 14,000 Jena: 6,000 Saudershausen (Sondershausen): 3,750 Detmold: 5,000 Arolsen (Bad Arolsen): 2,250 Waldeck: 1,000 Marburg: 8,000 Geissen (Giessen): 7,500 Frankfort (Frankfurt): 58,000 Homburg (Bad Homburg vor der Höhe): 128,000 Cassel (Kassel): 32,500 Fulda: 9,500 Hanau: 15,000 Wisbaden: 13,000 Cologne: 95,250 Bonn: 18,000 Coblentz (Koblenz): 23,000 Westphalia: 1,445,700 Rhineland: 2,273,000 Wesel: 16,000 Essen: 7,250 Dusendorf (Düsseldorf): 28,000 Arensburg (Arnsberg): 4,500 Elberfeld (Now a subdivision of Wuppertal): 38,250 Munster (Münster): 25,000 Arnheim (Arnhem): 15,000 Breda: 14,500 Bergen op Zoom: 8,000 Rotterdam: 33,000 The Hague: 66,000 Liege (Liège): 73,000 Namur: 24,500 Antwerp: 30,000 Waterloo: 2,000 Brussels: 124,750 Ghent: 90,000 Tournay (Tournai): 30,500 Bruges: 45,000 Ostend: 12,500 Maestrich (Maastricht): 31,000 Posen (Poznań): 38,000 Frankfort on Oder (Frankfurt): 180,000 Custrin (Kostrzyn nad Odrą): 8,500 Soldin (Myślibórz): 6,000 Pomerania: 1,166,000 Brandenburg: 2,020,000 Prussia: 16,331,000 Stettin (Szczecin): 45,000 Stargard (Stargard Szczeciński): 13,250 Berlin: 420,000 Potsdam: 16,500 Anclam (Anklam): 8,500 New Strelitz (Neustrelitz): 7,500 Brunswick (Braunschweig): 40,000 Lunenburg (Lüneburg): 12,500 Lenzen: 3,000 Magdeburg: 51,000 Wismar: 11,500 Schwerin: 17,500 Lubeck (Lübeck): 25,250 Hanover: 40,500 Bremen: 53,000 Oldenburg: 8,000 Kniphausen (Wilhelmshaven): 3,000 Gluekstadt (Glückstadt): 6,000 Altona (Now a borough of Hamburg): 32,000 Hamburg: 137,000 Osnaburg (Osnabrück): 12,250 Embden (Emden): 12,500 Groningen: 31,000 Zwolle: 17,500 Netherlands: 3,363,000 Amsterdam: 225,000 Helder (Den Helder): 3,000 Utrecht: 45,000 Leeuwarden: 22,500 Butow (Bytów): 8,750 Stralsund: 18,500 Bergen (Bergen auf Rügen): 3,250 Rostock: 20,000 Kiel: 13,000 Rendsburg: 10,500 There is a table titled: Referene to the German States and contains the following: Austria, Catholic, Limited Monarchy with a population of 11,900,000. Prussia, Protestant, Limited Monarchy with a population of 12, 315,600. Bavaria, Catholic, Limited Monarchy with a population of 4,505,000. Saxony, Protestant, Limited Monarchy with a population of 1,836,500. Hanover, Protestant, Limited Monarchy with a population of 1,759,000. Wirtemberg, Protestant, Limited Monarchy with a population of 1,744,000. Baden, Catholic, Grand Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 1,363,000. Hesse Cassel, Protestant, Limited Monarchy with a population of 733,000. H. Darmstadt, Protestant, Grand Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 852,700. Holstein, Protestant, Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 526,900. Luxemburg, Catholic, Grand Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 389,500. Saxe Weimar, Protestant, Grand Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 262,000. Saxe Coburg Gotha, Protestant, Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 147,200. Saxe Altenburg, Protestant, Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 129,600. Saxe Meiningen, Protestant, Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 163,500. Brunswick, Protestant, Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 269,000. Mecklenburg Schwerin, Protestant, Grand Dutchy with a population of 534,500. Mecklenburg Strelitz, Protestant, Grand Dutchy with a population of 96,300. Oldenburg, Protestant, Grand Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 279,000. Nassau, Protestant, Dutchy, Limited Monarchy with a population of 418,700. Anhalt Dessau and Anhalt Bernburg, both Protestant, both Dutchy, both with the same Limited Monarchy with a combined population of 155,900. Scharzburg Sonder., Protestant, Principality with a population of 60,100. Scharzburg Rudolstadt, Protestant, Principality with a population of 69,700. Liechtenstein, Catholic, Principality, Limited Monarchy with a population of 6,360. Reuss Greitz, Protestant, Principality, Limited Monarchy with a population of 34,000. Reuss Schleiz, Protestant, Principality, Limited Monarchy with a population of 77,100. Lippe Detmold, Catholic, Principality, Limited Monarchy with a population of 108,300. Lippe Schauenburg, Protestant, Principality, Limited Monarchy with a population of 29,000. Waldeck, Protestant, Principality, Limited Monarchy with a population of 59,000. Hesse Homburg, Protestant, Landgraviate, Limited Monarchy with a population of 24,250. The Republics or Free Cities of: Frankfort Protestant with a population of 78,000 Lubeck Protestant with a population of 54,200. Bremen Protestant with a population of 78,100. Hamburg, Protestant with a population of 183,100. Total Population of the German States: 41, 248,110. The Table also states that Germany contains 244,000 Square Miles and 170 inhabitants to a Square Mile.
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Popular hymns no. 3: popular songs and standard hymns, suitable for the Bible school, church services..., Popular hymns number 3, Songs of hope : for the church and Sunday School / compiled and edited by E.O. Excell printed in round and shaped notes with orchestration, Songs of the century for missionary and revival meetings, Sabbath schools and young people's societies / edited by Geo. D. Elderkin, Jno. R. Sweney, Wm. J. Kirkpatrick, H.L. Gilmour, and F.A. Hardin, Songs of the king / [compiled by Charles Reign Scoville], Sunday school voices no. 2 : a collection of sacred songs / music editor Chas. H. Gabriel, The tabernacle hymns / edited and compiled by D.B. Towner and Arthur W. McKee, Treasury of song : songs for all religious gatherings / edited and compiled by Robert H. Coleman, Truth in song : for general Gospel work / edited by B.E. Warren ... [et al.], Twentieth century songs. Part one : a collection of new and popular songs with standard hymns for church, Sunday school, young people's societies and special services / edited by Chas. H. Gabriel, J.E. Hawes and W.E.M. Hackleman, 20th century songs, Victory songs, Victory songs : for the church, Sunday school and evangelistic services / Homer A. Rodeheaver, compiler Chas. H. Gabriel, music editor, Victory songs : for the church, Sunday school and evangelistic services / Homer A. Rodeheaver, compiler Chas. H. Gabriel, music editor, Waves of glory, no. 2 / edited by W.J. Kirkpatrick, D.L. Wallace, C.J. Kinne, Windows of heaven : hymns new and old for the church, Sunday school and home / compiled by H.M. Wharton, Winona hymns / compiled by J. Wilbur Chapman edited by E.O. Excell for the Evangelistic Committee, Wonder hymns of faith : a new general-purpose song-book / compiled by Chas. R. Scoville, W.E.M. Hackleman, J.E. Sturgis, orchestration by J.C. Blaker, responsive readings selected by E.E. Violette, The world evangel : the brightest and best songs for all religious gatherings / edited and compiled by Robert H. Coleman, World wide revival songs, number two : for the church, Sunday school and evangelistic campaigns / James G. Garth, compiler Albert C. Fisher, editor assistant compilers, Harry Dixon Loes ... [et al.] by order of the International Federation of Christian Workers, The young people's hymnal : adapted to the use of Sunday schools, Epworth Leagues, prayer meetings, and revivals / by W.D. Kirkland, James Atkins, William J. Kirkpatrick, The young people's hymnal, no. 2. Adapted to the use of Sunday schools, epworth leagues, prayer meetings, and revivals. By James Atkins, and William J. Kirkpatrick, The young people's hymnal No. 3 : adapted to the use of Sunday Schools, Epworth Leagues, prayer meetings, and revivals / by James Atkins and William J. Kirkpatrick
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Date
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[c1910], 1910, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999, 9999
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Title
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Map No. 6. United States (1853)
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Summary
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Detailed single page historical steel engraved map of the Western portion of the Southeast published in 1853. This map depicts Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, and parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, and Alabama as well as a small region of Mexico. The map shows several geographic details on cities, towns, rivers, mountains, and islands. Along the bottom edge is written: Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1853 by Daniel Burgess & Co in the Clerks office of the Southern District of New York. States appearing on the Map: Texas, Indian Territory (Oklahoma), Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Alabama. Cities appearing on the Map: Mexico: Matamoras (Matamoros). Texas: Pt. Isabel (Port Isabel), Corpus Christi, San Patricio, Refugio, Goliad, Victoria, Texana (Ghost Town now underneath Lake Texana), Matagorda, Houston, Velasco (Annexed in 1957 by and now part of Freeport, Texas), Brazoria, San Felipe, Richmond, La Grange, Columbus, Gonzales, St. Marks (San Marcos), Jasper, Woodville, Beaumont, Swarlwout (Ghost Town near Lake Livingston, Texas since 1875), Liberty, Cincinnati (Ghost Town since 1892), Huntsville, Montgomery, Washington (Washington-on-the-Brazos), Franklin, Nashville (Ghost Town since 1868), Boonville (Ghost Town near Bryan, Texas), Brenham, Bastrop, Austin, Milam, Shelbyville, Nacogdoches, San Augustine, Rusk, Palestine, Crockett, Leona, Henderson, Linder (Linden), Smithland, Marshall, Tyler, Dallas, Centreville (Ghost Town), Boston, Paris, Clarksville, Tarrant (Ghost Town after 1871), and Bonham. Louisiana: Houma, Thibodeauville (Thibodaux), New Orleans, Lafayette (Now the Districts of Irish Channel and Garden District, both part of the Fourth District of New Orleans), Franklin, Covington, Frankinton (Franklinton), Springfield, St. Helena (Greensburg?), Donaldson V. (Donaldsonville), Baton Rouge, Clinton, St. Francis V. (St. Francisville), Pt. Coupee (Point Coupee), Inberville (?), St. Martinsville (St. Martinville), Vermillionville (The name was changed to Lafayette in 1884), Opelousas, Harrisonburg, Vidalia, Alexandria, Marksville, Natchitoches, Manny (Many), Providence (Lake Providence), Richmond, Farmersville, Monroe, Columbia, Overton (Abandoned), Sparta (Ghost Town since 1924), Shreveport, and Mansfield. Alabama: Mobile. Mississippi: Mississippi City (Annexed in 1965 by and now a part of Gulfport, Mississippi), Shieldsboro (Now Bay Saint Louis), Leakesville, Winchester (Ghost Town), Westville (Ghost Town), Williamsburg, Columbia, Ellisville, Augusta (Now a Ghost Town since 1906 and the site of Old Augusta Historic Site), Meadville, Liberty, Holmesville, Gallatin, Monticello, Grand Gulf (Ghost Town since 1860 near Grand Gulf Military State Park), Pt. Gibson (Port Gibson), Rodney (Ghost Town), Fayette, Natchez, Wood V. (Woodville), Quitman, Marion, De Kalb, Philadelphia, Decatur, Paulding, Raleigh, Hillsboro, Carthage, Canton, Brandon, Benton, Jackson, Yazoo City, Vicksburg, Tallula, Cotton Gin Port (Ghost Town since 1887 near Amory, Mississippi), Athens, Aberdeen, Columbus, Macon, Stark V. (Starkville), Carrollton, Coffeeville, Kosciusko, Greensboro (Ghost Town), Houston, Louisville, Charleston, Lexington, Bolivar, Princeton (Ghost Town after caving into the Mississippi River), Jacinto (Ghost Town since 1870), Ripley, Fulton, Pontotoc, Oxford, Holly Springs, Hernando, Delta (Ghost Town since 1890), Peyton (Ghost Town), and Ponola (?). Arkansas: Belleville (Red Fork), Columbia (Abandoned and caved into the Mississippi River in the 1870s), Warren, Camden, El Dorado, Washington, Lewisville, Paraclifta (Ghost Town after the entire town moved to Lockesburg, Arkansas in 1885), Helena (Now the Eastern portion of Helena-West Helena), Arkansas (Arkansas Post), Lawrenceville, Perryville, Little Rock, Benton, Pine Bluff, Montgomery (?), Hot Springs, Archidelphia (Arkadelphia), Murfreesboro, Liberty (?), Mt. Vernon (Ghost Town), Marion, Bolivar (Bolivar Township), Osceola, Searcy, Batesville, Elizabeth (Ghost Town after caving into the White River), Lebanon (Marshall), Clinton, Lewisburg (Ghost Town since 1883), Booneville, Huntsville, Osage (?), Clarksville, Dover, Danville, Fayetteville, Van Buren, Ft. Smith (Fort Smith), Gainesville (Non existent after a city-wide fire in 1892), Pocahontas, Smithville, Athens (Ghost Town), Yellville, Carrollton, and Bentonville. Indian Territory: Ft. Towson (Fort Towson and Ft. Gibson (Fort Gibson). Tennessee: Memphis. Populations given are as follows: Thibodeauville (Thibodaux): 1,250 New Orleans: 119,500 Lafayette: 14,250 Houston: 2,500 St. Marks (San Marcos): 500 Shieldsboro (Now Bay Saint Louis): 1,000 Baton Rouge: 4,000 St. Martinsville (St. Martinville): 500 Louisiana: 518,000 Austin: 1,000 Grand Gulf (Ghost Town since 1860 near Grand Gulf Military State Park): 1,000 Natchez: 4,500 Alexandria: 500 Natchitoches: 1,500 Rusk: 500 Texas: 213,000 Hillsboro: 500 Jackson: 3,000 Vicksburg: 3,750 Marshall: 1,250 Columbus: 2,500 Mississippi: 607,000 Warren: 500 El Dorado: 2,000 Washington: 500 Arkansas: 210,000 Helena (Now the Eastern portion of Helena-West Helena): 500 Arkansas (Arkansas Post): 500 Little Rock: 2,250 Pine Bluff: 500 Archidelphia (Arkadelphia): 250 Marion: 500 Bolivar: 500 Batesville: 750 Huntsville: 250 Clarksville: 500 Fayetteville: 500 Van Buren: 3,000 Bentonville: 250 Native American Tribes shown living in areas of the Indian Territory (Oklahoma) are Choctaws, Seminoles, Creeks, and Cherokees. The map also states that from New Orleans to New York by water 2,000 miles.
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Title
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Carte Generale de la Grece Ancienne Et D'Une Partie De Ses Colonies par A. H. Brue, Geographe de S. A. R. Mousieuv. (1822)
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Date
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1822-01-01
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Summary
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This is a copper engraved map of Ancient Greece and Turkey from 1822 by Adrien Hubert Brue. The title of the map is Carte generale de la Grece Ancienne et D'ne Partie de Ses Colonies, par A.H. Brue, Geographe de S.A.R. Monsieur. A Paris, Chez l'Auteur, rue des Macons-Sorbonne, no. 9, et chez les principaux marchands de geographie. Aout 1822. This roughly translates to General Map of Ancient Greece and Some of Its Colonies, by A. H. Brue, Geographe S. A. R. sir. In Paris at Rue des Macons-Sorbonne, No. 9 and at major geography merchants. August 1822. Countries appearing on this map: Greece Cities appearing on this map: Greece: Island of Crete: Cisanuis (?), Coricus (?), Aptera (Destroyed by an Earthquake in the 7th Century), Polyrrhenia, Cydonia (Kydonia, abandoned after the 13th Century), Amphimalia (Amphimalla, abandoned), Phenix (?), Pantomatrium (?), Miletus (?), Rhitymna (Rethymno), Eleutherna (Abandoned in the 16th Century), Dium (?), Cylaeum (?), Cnossus (Knossos, abandoned 1100 BC), Methymna (?), Assus (?), Phaetus (?), Gortyna (Gortyn, destroyed in 828), Inathus (?), Heracleum (Heraklion), Lyctos (Lyctus, abandoned by the 16th Century), Minoa (?), Arcades (?), Hyerapytna (Ierapetra), Blenna (?), Prasos (Praisos), and Nanus (?). Island of Karpathos: Nisyrus (?) and Posidium (?). Peloponnese: Messenia: Pylus (Pylos), Methone (Methoni), Asine (Abandoned), Corone (Koroni), Stenyelaeus (?), Ahia (?), Pharie (?), Aetylus (?), Thalamie (?), Laconia: Baea (Boeae), Asopus (Asopos), Leucaae (?), Epi Delium (?), Epidaurus Limera, Geronthae (?), Maryos (?), Chorion (?), Magonia (?), Acria (?), Melos (?), Gythium (?), Palae (?), Las (?), Teuthrone (Kotronas), Pyrrhieus (?), Taenarium vel Caenopolis (Tenarus), Messa (?), Attica: Islands: Cythera (?), Scandea, South Aegean: Milos: Melos (Milos)
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