Belgium - Belgium; Emanuel Bowen - AN ACCURATE MAP OF THE NETHERLANDS BY EMANUEL BOWEN - 1751-1760

04
days
21
hours
55
minutes
26
seconds
Current bid
€ 4
No reserve price
3 other people are watching this object
nlBidder 0512 €4
nlBidder 1673 €1

Catawiki Buyer Protection

Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details

Trustpilot 4.4 | 122813 reviews

Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.

Copper engraving map of Belgium by Emanuel Bowen, titled An Accurate Map of the Netherlands by Emanuel Bowen, with late hand colour, 320 x 220 mm, in Excellent condition, and including an inset of Mons.

AI-assisted summary

Description from the seller

A NEW AND ACCURATE MAP OF THE NETHERLANDS OR LOW COUNTRIES....

An attractive copper line engraving on paper, produced by Emanuel Bowen and published in London circa 1747. There is an inset plan of Mons. A


Measures approx. 320 x 220 mm. Good condition, see photo. Overall age toning.

Hand Colour.

A guaranteed genuine antique map.

verall age toning.

Hand Colour.

A guaranteed genuine antique map.



EMANUEL BOWEN




Emanuel Bowen (1694 – 8 May 1767) was a Welsh map engraver, who achieved the unique

distinction of becoming Royal Mapmaker to both to King George II of Great Britain and Louis XV

of France . Bowen was highly regarded by his contemporaries for producing some of the largest,

most detailed and most accurate maps of his era. He is known to have worked with most British

cartographic figures of the period including John Owen and Herman Moll . Bowen was born at

Tal-y-Llychau (now Talley ), Carmarthenshire , Wales . His father was Owen

Bowen, a prominent member of the local gentry ("a distinguished but not noble gentleman”). In

1709, Emanuel Bowen was apprenticed as a merchant tailor to Charles Price.

Bowen worked in London from 1714 and was admitted to the Merchant Taylors Livery Company

on 3 October 1716.One of his earliest engraved works, Britannia Depicta , published in 1720,

contained over two hundred road maps together with a miniature county map of each of the counties

of England and Wales. It followed on John Ogilby's earlier work with updated style of historical and

heraldic detail. It was an unusual feature of the atlas that the maps were engraved on both sides of

each page, resulting in a handier-sized book. By 1726 he was noted as one of the leading London

engravers. Among his multiple apprentices, the most notable were Thomas Kitchin , Thomas

Jeffreys and John Lodge. Another apprentice, John Oakman who had an affair with and eventually

married, Bowen's daughter. Other Bowen apprentices include Thomas Buss, John Pryer, Samuel

Lyne, William Fowler and his own son Thomas Bowen . He published A Complete System of

Geography, 1744–7; an English Atlas, with a new set of maps, 1745(?); a Complete Atlas ... in

sixty-eight Maps,1752; Atlas Minimus; or a new set of Pocket Maps,1758; and a series of

separate maps of the English counties, of Germany, Asia Minor, and Persia, between 1736 and

1776. A recurring feature of Bowen's work, evident even on the early road maps, was his habit of

filling every corner and space of the map with jottings and footnotes, both historical and

topographical.

In spite of his royal patronage and renown, Bowen like many cartographers of his day, would die in

poverty. His son, Thomas Bowen (1733–1790) would carry on the business, but would ultimately

suffer a similar fate, dying in a Clerkenwell workhouse in 1790.

A NEW AND ACCURATE MAP OF THE NETHERLANDS OR LOW COUNTRIES....

An attractive copper line engraving on paper, produced by Emanuel Bowen and published in London circa 1747. There is an inset plan of Mons. A


Measures approx. 320 x 220 mm. Good condition, see photo. Overall age toning.

Hand Colour.

A guaranteed genuine antique map.

verall age toning.

Hand Colour.

A guaranteed genuine antique map.



EMANUEL BOWEN




Emanuel Bowen (1694 – 8 May 1767) was a Welsh map engraver, who achieved the unique

distinction of becoming Royal Mapmaker to both to King George II of Great Britain and Louis XV

of France . Bowen was highly regarded by his contemporaries for producing some of the largest,

most detailed and most accurate maps of his era. He is known to have worked with most British

cartographic figures of the period including John Owen and Herman Moll . Bowen was born at

Tal-y-Llychau (now Talley ), Carmarthenshire , Wales . His father was Owen

Bowen, a prominent member of the local gentry ("a distinguished but not noble gentleman”). In

1709, Emanuel Bowen was apprenticed as a merchant tailor to Charles Price.

Bowen worked in London from 1714 and was admitted to the Merchant Taylors Livery Company

on 3 October 1716.One of his earliest engraved works, Britannia Depicta , published in 1720,

contained over two hundred road maps together with a miniature county map of each of the counties

of England and Wales. It followed on John Ogilby's earlier work with updated style of historical and

heraldic detail. It was an unusual feature of the atlas that the maps were engraved on both sides of

each page, resulting in a handier-sized book. By 1726 he was noted as one of the leading London

engravers. Among his multiple apprentices, the most notable were Thomas Kitchin , Thomas

Jeffreys and John Lodge. Another apprentice, John Oakman who had an affair with and eventually

married, Bowen's daughter. Other Bowen apprentices include Thomas Buss, John Pryer, Samuel

Lyne, William Fowler and his own son Thomas Bowen . He published A Complete System of

Geography, 1744–7; an English Atlas, with a new set of maps, 1745(?); a Complete Atlas ... in

sixty-eight Maps,1752; Atlas Minimus; or a new set of Pocket Maps,1758; and a series of

separate maps of the English counties, of Germany, Asia Minor, and Persia, between 1736 and

1776. A recurring feature of Bowen's work, evident even on the early road maps, was his habit of

filling every corner and space of the map with jottings and footnotes, both historical and

topographical.

In spite of his royal patronage and renown, Bowen like many cartographers of his day, would die in

poverty. His son, Thomas Bowen (1733–1790) would carry on the business, but would ultimately

suffer a similar fate, dying in a Clerkenwell workhouse in 1790.

Details

Era
1400-1900
Country
Belgium
Geographical specification
Belgium
Map maker/ publisher
Emanuel Bowen
Map/ Book title
AN ACCURATE MAP OF THE NETHERLANDS BY EMANUEL BOWEN
Period
1751-1760
Condition
Excellent
Technique
Copper engraving
Additional Information
Detailed and decorative map of Belgium.
Map colour
Later hand colour
Height
220 mm
Width
320 mm
PortugalVerified
Private

Similar objects

For you in

Maps