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Lot No :

THOMAS KITCHIN (1719 - 1784)

A NEW MAP OF INDOSTAN OR EAST INDIES AGREEABLE TO THE LATEST AUTHORITIES


Estimate: Rs 15,000-Rs 20,000 ( $210-$280 )


A New Map of Indostan or East Indies agreeable to the latest Authorities


Thomas Kitchin, A New Map of Indostan or East Indies agreeable to the latest Authorities by T. Kitchin Geog.r Hydrographer to his Majesty, London, 1782
Map Size: 13.2 x 15 in (33.5 x 38 cm)
Sheet Size: 15 x 17.4 in (37.5 x 43.5 cm)

This work will be shipped unframed

NON-EXPORTABLE

Striking and highly detailed fine unusual 1782 copper engraved map of Indian Subcontinent. Covers India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, South-Eastern Iran, Southern part of Tibet, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Laccadives islands, northern Maldives Islands and a bit of Burma (Myanmar). The map provides excellent topographic details on cities, towns, rivers, reliefs and islands. A large figurate title cartouche, a compass rose and three mileage scales complete the map.

The map has been engraved by Thomas Kitchin and published in Miller's "The New, Complete, Authentic, and Universal System of Geography..".

Thomas Kitchin (or Thomas Kitchen) (17181784) was an English engraver and cartographer, who became hydrographer to the king. He was also a writer, who wrote about the history of the West Indies.

He was born in Southwark, and was apprenticed to Emanuel Bowen in 1732. Originally based in Clerkenwell, by late 1755 Kitchin was established on Holborn Hill. From 1773 Kitchin was royal hydrographer to the king. He married Sarah Bowen, daughter of Emanuel, in 1739, and then Jane, daughter of Joseph Burroughs, in 1762. He died in St Albans on 23 June 1784. Kitchin lived and worked in London until his retirement.

He produced John Elphinstone's map of Scotland (1746), Geographia Scotiae (1749), and The Small English Atlas (1749) with Thomas Jefferys. The Large English Atlas (with Bowen 174960) was a serious attempt to cover England at large scale.

Kitchin frequently stole the works of other cartographers, which is one reason why he "created" so much work as a cartographer. His book, "The Present State of the West-Indies: Containing an Accurate Description of What Parts Are Possessed by the Several Powers in Europe" was published in 1778 by R. Baldwin in London.

Kitchin died in June 1784 and was buried in St Alban's Cathedral. His memorial stone has not survived.(Source: Wikipedia)