184 
H. G. FORDHAM-HERTFORDSHIRE MAPS. 
There appear to have been some subsequent issues of this Atlas. 
One of 1743 is referred to in ‘British Topography’ (1780), and 
I have seen an impression of a map of Herts of a still later date, 
apparently, as the imprint “ sold by C. Dicey & C°. in Aldermary 
Church Yard, London,” has a very modern aspect. I have no clue, 
however, to its date. 
* 1715 (c). Taylor, Thomas. 8b x 5f. Scale, 6 miles = 
1 inch. Engraved by Wenceslaus Hollar [1670 or 1671]. The map 
of Herts described under Taylor, 1671 (?), ante , p. 31, unaltered. 
The atlas published by Taylor, without date, of which the full 
engraved title is (in the copy ascribed to 1716 and catalogued 
below): ‘ England Exactly Described Or a Guide to Travellers 
In a Compleat Sett of Maps of All the Counties of England; 
being a Map for each County, Wherein every Towne and Tillage 
is Particularly Express’d with the Names and Limits of every 
Hundred, and the Roads and Distances in Measured Miles ac¬ 
cording to Mr. Ogilby’s Survey,’ contains, in the two copies I have 
examined in the British Museum Library, in addition to the set of 
Blome’s small county maps, a map of the “North Part of Great 
Britain called Scotland,” dated 1715, and one of England, undated, 
both by Taylor. These two copies are both ascribed to 1715 in the 
British Museum Catalogue, and the maps do not contain the roads. 
In a third copy in the Museum, indexed under Ogilby (see below, 
1716 c.) is a “ Mapp of Ireland” by Taylor, dated 1716, and roads 
are inserted in the maps. 
* 1716 (c). Taylor, Thomas. 8b x 5f. Scale, 6 miles = 
1 inch. Engraved by Wenceslaus Hollar [1670 or 1671]. 
Another impression of the map of Herts described at p. 31 ante, 
with the main roads shown by double lines, and with the distances 
inserted in figures in small circles on the line of road. In the copy 
in the British Museum the space under the title and the bottom 
panel in the left-hand bottom corner are blank. 
Erom a copy of ‘ England Exactly Described,’ containing a map 
of Ireland dated 1716, by Taylor, and ascribed to that date in the 
British Museum Catalogue, in which it is indexed under Ogilby. 
* 1720. Cox, Thomas.* 8£ X 6-f-. Scale, about 5 miles = 
1 inch. Drawn by Robert Morden. 
A reprint of the map in the small Atlas previously noted under 
the dates 1700 and 1704, in the amended form in which it appeared 
in 1708. 
Erom the ‘ Magna Britannia et Hibernia, Antigua et Nova, or, 
A New Survey of Great Britain,’ vol. ii, London, 1720, 4to. There 
is also a quarto atlas of these maps, of which a copy without title or 
* Cox was vicar of Bromfield, Essex, 1685-1733. His ‘ Magna Britannia * 
was first published in monthly numbers, as a supplement to Europe in the Atlas 
Geographus, and was afterwards collected into 6 vols., 4to ; of which the 1st 
and 2nd came out in 1720 ; the 3rd in 1724 ; the 4th, 1727 ; the 5th, 1730 ; and 
the 6th, 1731. (Gough’s ‘Anecdotes,’ p. 21.) This work also contains distance 
tables for each county, exactly copied from those published by Norden in 1625. 
