Authentic Topographical Map of Islay, Jura, Etc. by John Bartholomew c. 1914
Authentic Topographical Map of Islay, Jura, Etc. by John Bartholomew c. 1914
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This impressive map dates from c.1914 and shows the areas of Islay and Jura as well as the Isle of Mull in painstaking detail. It also employs the use of contour colouring to demonstrate the topography of the area. The map makes the perfect gift for the whisky lover who has everything.
Although not shown on the map, distilleries in this area of Scotland include Port Ellen, Laphroaig, Lagavulin, Ardbeg, Caol Ila, Ardnahoe, Bunnahabhain, Jura, Bowmore, Tobermory, and Oban.
All maps have been professionally mounted in acid-free mounts ready for framing.
Dimensions
Plate: 18.3cm x 14.4cm
Outer mount: 30.5cm x 25.3cm
The History of the Map
This map hails from c.1914 when John Bartholomew was surveying and producing maps of Scotland. The map shows the islands of Islay, Jura, and Mull, as well as parts of Argyll and the Campbeltown Peninsula.
John Bartholomew, Cartographer (1860-1920)
John Bartholomew came from a long line of map makers, being the great-great-grandson of the founder of John Bartholomew & Son, an established map publishing company in Edinburgh.
Bartholomew took over control of the family business in 1888. From 1893 to 1919, he was in partnership with his cousin, Andrew G. Scott. During this time, the company was known as John Bartholomew & Co., the name that can be seen on our maps.
Some of John Bartholomew’s most notable achievements include being a founder member of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, using and popularising the use of colour contouring to depict topography, and, in 1910, being appointed Cartographer Royal by King George V.
Perhaps Bartholomew’s most lasting legacy is the naming of the continent Antarctica in 1886, as he prepared a map of the South Pole to accompany an article in a magazine. Various ideas for the name of the southern continent had been proposed, but Bartholomew was the first to put the name ‘Antarctica’ on a map.
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