<p><em>The Queen’s Atlas</em> is a truly beautiful reminder that maps are the perfect synthesis of science and art, geography and history, politics, power and propaganda. This fascinating account of Christopher Saxton’s life and work is also a time machine, whisking us back to the intrigues of the Tudor court, and its ravenous hunger for knowledge of the lie of its land. Saxton’s maps changed the country for ever; with erudite clarity, David Fletcher tells us why, and shows us how.</p>
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<p>Mike Parker, author of<em> Map Addict </em>and<em> All the Wide Border</em></p>
<p>Finally, a definitive account of Christopher Saxton, the founder of modern regional English mapmaking, and his extraordinary atlas. David Fletcher has produced a seamless marriage of words and images in helping us understand the origins and significance of this monumental act of Tudor mapmaking. A wonderful achievement.’ </p>
<p>Jerry Brotton, author of <em>Four Points of the Compass: the Unexpected History of Direction</em> and <em>A History of the World in Twelve Maps.</em></p>
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Nowadays, we take for granted the ready availability of maps of all kinds. In mid-Tudor England, they were rare. All this was to change in 1579 when Christopher Saxton, a farmer from the West Riding of Yorkshire, became the first cartographer to make a published atlas of all the counties of England and Wales. This book traces the story of Saxton’s life and legacy by reconstructing his extraordinary mapmaking project alongside the crucial nature of the support and encouragement he received from Queen Elizabeth I and her court.
Saxton’s atlas became the template for most detailed maps of the country for almost two centuries: it is hard to exaggerate its importance. For many, his atlas provided the first detailed image of England and Wales they had ever seen, showing the Elizabethan kingdom as a whole and in its constituent parts. This lavishly illustrated book reproduces all Saxton’s county maps together with many other illustrations revealing the forebears and successors to this groundbreaking work. Today, Saxton’s maps give us an invaluable cartographic snapshot of late Tudor England.
This lavishly illustrated volume including all of Christopher Saxton’s maps, provides a cartographic snapshot of late Tudor England and a fascinating insight into the political priorities of the Elizabethan court.
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Dr DAVID FLETCHER is an independent researcher specialising in the history of cartography of England and Wales in the early modern and modern eras.