Maps of Jamaica

Maps of Jamaica

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Map Of Jamaica According To A Survey Made In The Year 1670

This is a map of Jamaica in the year 1670. It is taken from the first volume of Edward Long's 'The History of Jamaica' which traces events on the island from the European occupation in 1655 to the late eighteenth century. On this map Jamaica is divided into parishes, with settlements, trees and dense vegetation marked and labelled. The depth of the harbours is also shown.
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Jamaique.

1 : 940000 Buchon, J. A. C.; Carey, H. C.; Lea, I.
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Jamaica, Americae septentrionalis ampla insula, a Christophoro Columbo detecta, in suas gubernationes peraccurate distincta

1 : 500000 per Nicolaum Visser L. v. Anse schulp. Amst. Bat. : [s.n.]
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Jamaica.

1 : 813000 Melish, John
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Jamaica, Americae septentrionalis ampla insula, a Christophoro Columbo detecta, in suas gubernationes peraccurate distincta

1 : 500000 per Nicolaum Visser L. v. Anse schulp. Amst. Bat : nunc apud Pet: Schenk Jun.
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Jamaica.

1 : 264000 Lucas, Fielding Jr.
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Jamaica.

1 : 418176 Stanford, Edward
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La Giammaica.

1 : 950000 Zatta, Antonio
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Carte de l'isle de la Jamaïque

1 : 860000
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Carte de l'Isle de la Jamaique

1 : 1
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Insula Iamaica : in suas parochias divisa et secundum exemplar primitivum Londinense excusa

1 : 1300000
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The island of Jamaica, divided into its principal parishes, with the roads &c.

1 : 1075000
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Charte von Jamaica

1 : 950000 Jamajka Pluth, Fr.
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CHARTE von JAMAICA

1 : 950000 Jamajka Pluth, Fr.
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Jamaica.

1 : 500000 Robert Laurie & James Whittle
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Jamaica.

1 : 1320000 Peterson, Augusts
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Map of the Island of Jamaica

1 : 519000 Atlantský oceán Edinburgh Geographical Institute
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Jamaica - Leeward and Windward Islands.

1 : 3380000 Sharpe, J.
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Map of the Island of Jamaica

Map of the Island of Jamaica, prepared for the Jamaica Handbook, under the direction of Thomas Harrison, Govt. Surveyor, by Colin Liddell, 1895. Scale of statute miles, 34[ = 130 mm] Kingston, Jamaica : Government Printing Office
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Jamaica.

1 : 744000 Tallis, J. & F.
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Map of Jamaica.

1 : 411840 Arrowsmith, John
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Dominia Anglorum in praecipuis Insulis Americae ut sunt Insula S. Christophori, Antegoa, Iamaica, Barbados nec non Insulae Bermudes vel Sommers dictae

singulari mappa omnia exhibita et edita ab Homannianis Heredibus [Nürnberg] : [Homannische Erben]
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Geological map of part of Jamaica

1 : 1
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A Plan Of The Harbours And Towns Of Kingston And Port Royal In The Island Of Jamaica And Of Their Environs

Plan of the harbours and towns of Kingston and Port Royal in Jamaica as they were in 1815. The complete harbour consists of almost landlocked area approximately 10 miles long and 2 miles wide. The surveyor, Nathaniel Watts, has coloured settlements in pink, and has marked in fathoms the different depths of the harbour. In the late 17th century Port Royal had been a large, economically prosperous town and was the central trading post in the Caribbean. However it was largely destroyed by an earthquake in 1692, leading to the founding of Kingston the following year. Kingston (which took over from Spanish Town as the capital of the island in 1872) was more difficult for vessels to reach as it was further inland and had more shallow waters. It was built on land owned by Sir William Beeston, who sold it to the Council of Jamaica for £1,000. John Goffe was employed to survey the land and he was responsible for laying it out in its regular rectangularrectilinear patternrectangular formation. Watts, Nathanial. Cartographer.
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Panoramic view from Strawberry Hill, one of the St. Andrews Mountains, Jamaica

1 : 1
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Plan Of Port Royal Jamaica, As It Stood Previous To The Earthquake

Plan of Port Royal as it was before the devastating earthquake of 1692. In the late 17th century Port Royal was a large and economically prosperous town due to its central location and deep harbour which attracted trade from across the Caribbean islands. When the earthquake struck, 33 acres of land sank into the harbour, killing a third1 in 3 of the population - about 2000 people. In the following days there were further minor shocks and it is estimated that between 1000 ? 3000 more people died from injuries and disease. The map is coloured to clearly reveal the extent of the destruction. Areas of red and yellow shading show what was left of the town after the earthquake, the blue depicts land reclaimed from the sea, and white is used to show areas that were completely destroyed.
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Insurance Plan of Kingston, Jamaica (Sheet 10 & 11)

Insurance Plan of Kingston, Jamaica ... [By] C.E. Goad ... Scale, 50 ft. = 1 inch. ... Key-Plan, 500 ft. = 1 inch. London
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Insurance Plan of Kingston, Jamaica (Sheet 5)

London
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Insurance Plan of Kingston, Jamaica (Sheet 6)

London
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