Maps of Stratford-on-Avon

Maps of Stratford-on-Avon

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Warwickshire LIV.2 (includes: Brailes; Compton Wynyates; Honington; Idlictoe; Whatcote) - 25 Inch Map

1 : 2500 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Warwickshire LIV.2 (includes: Brailes; Compton Wynyates; Honington; Idlictoe; Whatcote) - 25 Inch Map

1 : 2500 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Warwickshire LIV.2 (includes: Brailes; Compton Wynyates; Honington; Idlictoe; Whatcote) - 25 Inch Map

1 : 2500 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Warwickshire LIV.NW - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Warwickshire LIV.NW - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Warwickshire LIV.NW - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Oxfordshire IV - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Oxfordshire IV - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Shipston-on-Stour

1 : 31680 This area at the edge of the Cotswolds is dominated by enclosed farmland. Depicted at top left is the Fosse Way, the old Roman road running from Exeter to Lincoln, via Bath, Cirencester and Leicester (where it intersected the Watling Street from London).
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Banbury (Hills) - OS One-Inch Revised New Series

1 : 63360 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Banbury (Outline) - OS One-Inch Revised New Series

1 : 63360 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Chipping Camden

1 : 31680 This plan covers parts of Warwickshire and Worcestershire, with the Severn Valley depicted in the middle. The River Avon meanders north-eastwards from Tewkesbury (where it meets the River Severn) to Stratford on Avon, where, after 17 locks, it joins the Stratford-on-Avon Canal. Below the Avon, near the bottom of the sheet, the Cotswolds form a dramatic limestone escarpment above the Severn Valley and Evesham Vale. Jurassic limestone, used as a building material throughout the area, gives the Cotswolds its distinctive look. Dawson, Robert
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Stow-on-the-Wold

1 : 31680 The Cotswold Hills dominate the landscape around Stow depicted in this plan. Rising gently from the broad, green meadows of the upper Thames, the hills form a dramatic limestone escarpment above the Severn Valley and Evesham Vale. The Jurassic limestone is widely used as building material throughout the Cotswolds, giving the area its distinctive appearance. Grassland habitats and ancient beech forests are other typical features documented on the plan. Anderson, James
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Cheltenham and Evesham - OS One-Inch Map

1 : 63360 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Banbury - OS One-Inch Map

1 : 63360 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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The counti of Warwick the shire towne and citie of Coventre described

1 : 1
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A new improved map of Oxfordshire

1 Karte : Kupferdruck ; 69 x 51 cm Kitchin; Hinton sold by J. Hinton at the Kings Arms in St. Pauls Church Yard
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Oxford, Sheet 24 - Bartholomew's "Half Inch to the Mile Maps" of England & Wales

1 : 126720 Topographic maps Bartholomew, John George John Bartholomew & Co
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England & Wales [Bartholomew's "Half-inch to the mile" Map of]

J. Bartholomew
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Oxonium comitatus vulgo Oxford Shire

1 Karte : Kupferdruck ; 36 x 47 cm Valck; Schenk apud Gerardum Valk et Petrum Schenk
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Oxonivm comitatus, vulgo Oxford Shire

1 Karte : Kupferdruck ; 37 x 42 cm Blaeu Joan Blaeu
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Oxonium Comitatus vulgo Oxford Shire

1 : 220000 [Amstelodami] : [apud Joannem Janssonium]
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OXONIVM | Comitatus, Vulgo | OXFORD SHIRE.

Ioh. Blaeu excud.
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Wigorniensis Comitatus cum Warwicensi, nec non Conventriae Libertas

1 : 180000 Amstelodami : apud Joannem Janssonium
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VIGORNIENSIS Comitatus Sheet 21

This map of Worcestershire is from the 1583 edition of the Saxton atlas of England and Wales.This atlas was first published as a whole in 1579. It consists of 35 coloured maps depicting the counties of England and Wales. The atlas is of great significance to British cartography as it set a standard of cartographic representation in Britain and the maps remained the basis for English county mapping, with few exceptions, until after 1750. During the reign of Elizabeth I map use became more common, with many government matters referring to increasingly accurate maps with consistent scales and symbols, made possible by advances in surveying techniques. Illustrating the increasing used of maps in government matters, Lord Burghley, Elizabeth I’s Secretary of State, who had been determined to have England and Wales mapped in detail from the 1550s, selected the cartographer Christopher Saxton to produce a detailed and consistent survey of the country. The financier of the project was Thomas Seckford Master of Requests at the Court of Elizabeth I, whose arms appear, along with the royal crest, on each map. Saxton, Christopher Ryther, Augustine
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Wigorniensis comitatus et comitatus Warwicensis; nec non Coventræ libertas

1 Karte : Kupferdruck ; 40 x 48 cm Blaeu Joan Blaeu
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Wigorniensis Comitatus cum Warwicensi; nec non Conventriae Libertas. [Karte], in: Novus atlas absolutissimus, Bd. 7, S. 342.

1 Karte aus Atlas Janssonius Offizin
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