1831 Dower / Teesdale Map of Southern Italy and Sicily

SouthItaly-dower-1831
$425.00
South Italy. - Main View
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1831 Dower / Teesdale Map of Southern Italy and Sicily

SouthItaly-dower-1831

Rome, Naples, and Messina.
$425.00

Title


South Italy.
  1831 (dated)     13.5 x 16.25 in (34.29 x 41.275 cm)     1 : 1971200

Description


This is an 1831 John Dower and Henry Teesdale map of southern Italy, then known as the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.
A Closer Look
Depicting from Rome to Cape Passaro in southern Sicily, provinces are shaded for differentiation. Cities and towns are labeled throughout, including Rome, Naples, Salerno, Brindisi, Messina, Palermo, and Syracuse. Capes, bays, and other coastal landmarks are also identified. An inset along the left border details Sardinia.
The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, formed when the Naples merged with Sicily, existed from 1816 until 1860. Giuseppe Garibaldi overthrew the King of the Two Sicilies in 1860, then the people voted to join the Savoyard Kingdom of Sardinia in a plebiscite.
Publication History and Census
This map was drawn and engraved by John Dower for the 1831 edition of A New General Atlas of the World, published by Henry Teesdale. We note a single cataloged example of the 1831 edition of the separate map in OCLC which is part of the collection at the University of Oxford.

CartographerS


John James Dower (June 1, 1825 - 1901) was a well-respected mapmaker, print seller, and publisher based in London, England. Dower is the heir to the more prominent London engraver and mapmaker John Crane Dower (1791 - 1847). Dower worked with many prominent middle to late 19th century London map publishers including Weller, Cassell, Bacon, Petermann, and others. He was elected to the Royal Geographical Society in 1854. Dower also published on maps his own account including one atlas and various school geographies. In addition to his cartographic work, Dower is well known as an engraver of military scenes. More by this mapmaker...


Henry Teesdale (December 1776 - January 1856) was a British map publisher active in the first half of the 19th century. Teesdale was born in London. He was elected to the Royal Geographical Society in 1830. Teesdale initially partnered with John Hordan and William Colling Hobson as Henry Teesdale and Company, but this partnership was dissolved in 1832. Afterwards Teesdale continued to publish maps and atlases on his own account. He worked with several major British map engravers of the period including John Crane Dower, Christopher Greenwood, and Josiah Henshall, among others. His most prominent work is a large map of the world engraved by Dower. He must have enjoyed considerable commercial success because in 1845 he is registered as a partner in the Royal Bank of Scotland. Teesdale died in January of 1856 and was buried in All Souls, Kensal Green. Learn More...

Source


Dower, J., A New General Atlas of the World..., (London: Henry Teesdale) 1831.    

Condition


Very good. Light wear and toning along original centerfold. Light soiling.

References


OCLC 43212482.