H. a. FQRDHAM—HERTFORDSHIRE MAPS. 
205 
The north of this indicator points a little to the east of the 
perpendicular of the map, and is inscribed along the line : “ Minutes 
of Latitude agreeable to the Scale taken on the Perpendicular.” 
In the bottom right-hand corner of the sheet are the following 
details, etc.:—“Hamlets belonging to Each Parish. 
“ Bovington a Hamlet belonging to Hemel-hemsted. 
“ Chevesfield a Do. belonging to Graveley. 
“ Pirton a Do. to Hitchin. 
“ Hippolites a Do. to Do. 
“ Lully a Do. to Ofley Mag. 
“ Nuthamsted a Do. to Barkway. 
“ Wakeley a Do. Self Dependent. 
“ Hoddesdon a Do. to Broxbourn. 
“ Broadfield a Do. to (lettered. 
“N.B. The Western Part of this County from Chipping Barnet 
along the North Hoad, was Survey’d by Jn°. Andrews, the East 
Part by And w . Dury, Etc.” 
And in the margin: “Minutes of Longitude East from London.” 
This map is coloured by parishes, by hand. 
1767 (c). Bowen, Emanuel, and Thomas Bowen. 
12f X 8-f-. Scale, 4J- miles = 1 inch. 
A map of Herts very full of names and notes, following closely 
Kit chin’s large map of 1760-63. It shows the hundreds, and all 
the same details as are found in that map. The border is plain, 
with double-ruled lines, with the degrees and minutes marked, 
and: “Longit. from London” between the lines at the foot. It 
is crossed by lines of latitude and longitude 5' apart, broken in many 
places by the text of the names and notes. Outside the right-hand 
top corner, “No. 3.” In the left-hand top corner a panel in scrolls, 
with title: “Hartford Shire Divided into Hundreds; Exhibiting 
the County and Market Towns Etc. with concise Historical 
Extracts, relative to its Natural Produce, Trade and Manufactures. 
Describing also the Church Livings; with Improvements not Inserted 
in any other Set of Half Sheet County Maps Extant. By Eman: 
Bowen Geographer to His late Majesty.” To the right of this 
panel is an “ Explanation,” showing the signs used on the map. 
Below is printed the same note on the orthography of the name 
Hertford, or Hartford, as occurs on the large map of 1760-63, 
and, again below, on the intersection of two meridian lines, is 
a circular indicator of the points of the compass. Below this, again, 
are, in descending order, historical notes on Hitchin and Abbot’s 
Langley, and, in the left-hand bottom corner, a scale of (12) 
“ British Statute Miles.” On the right-hand side of the map the 
margin is nearly filled with similar notes on Hartfordshire, Hartford, 
St. Albans, Ware, and Bishop Stortford. (The last four are printed 
in the Introduction, at p. 7 ante.) 
From the ‘ Atlas Anglicanus, Or a Complete Sett of Maps of 
the Counties of South Britain.’ “ By the late Emanuel Bowen, 
Geographer to His Majesty George II d , and Thomas Bowen. Printed 
for T. Kitchin, No. 59 Holborn Hill.” London, n.d., fob 
15 
VOL. XI.—PART VI. 
