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A panoramic view
of London. Drawn and engraved by J.H.Banks. London : E.Wallis,
1845. Maps 162.n.2
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The Library departments of the British Museum were incorporated
into the newly created British Library in 1973. The map collections
have grown steadily since the Museum's foundation in 1753 and they
are now spread over several parts of the Library. Taken together,
they form the major cartographic collection in the British Isles,
comprising materials in a variety of formats including maps, atlases,
globes, adverts, postcards, printing plates, coins and medals. Twentieth-century
series mapping is supported by a comprehensive historical collection,
universal in its coverage. Legal deposit, international exchange,
donation and purchase provide regular and substantial additions
to these collections.
The principal repository of printed maps in the British Library
is the Map Library, which has been a separate unit since 1867. Most
western language manuscript maps (except those in King George III's
Topographical and Maritime collections) have traditionally been
housed in the Department of Manuscripts and those in oriental scripts
in a separate department (formerly Oriental Manuscripts and Printed
Books, now Oriental and India Office Collections). In 1982, the
India Office Library and Records became part of the British Library,
bringing with it a major collection of maps of South Asia. In a
further development, in 1987, curatorial responsibility for manuscript
maps passed to the Map Library. The Map Collections now form part
of the Directorate of Scholarship and collections.
History and Scope of the Map Collections
The Map Library is the national map library of Great Britain, with
a collection of over 4.25 million atlases, maps, globes and books
on cartography, dating from the fifteenth century to the present
day. This makes the collection the second largest in the world (after
the Library of Congress). The Map Library receives through copyright
deposit the complete range of British production. It also acquires
foreign topographical maps at medium and small scales, supplemented
by regular deposits of superseded mapping from the Directorate of
Military Survey, as well as thematic and general atlases and maps.
The historical collections are added to steadily through purchase
and donation.
The special viewing requirements of maps, which are often very
large, were recognised in the British Museum from the beginning.
Shortly after the Museum opened in 1759 in its first quarters in
Montague House, a special 6- by 8-foot reading table was installed
in a 'Charts room'. However, the main foundation collection of the
Map Library, the King George III Topographical Collection, did not
come to the Map Library until 1828. This was King George III's collection
of manuscript and printed maps, plans and topographical views, which
remains today in its original geographical arrangement. Considering
British colonial interests and military activity of the late 18th
century, it is not surprising that it is perhaps the finest geographical
collection in the world for 18th century America.
The early 19th century trustees of the British Museum were keen
to maintain a good up-to-date collection of geographical maps. They
provided Antonio Panizzi, who had been appointed Keeper of Printed
Books in 1837, with special funds for map purchases. However, the
treatment of the map collections as a separate administrative unit
only really began in 1844 when Richard Henry Major was placed in
charge of them. Following completion of the Iron Library in 1857,
maps were housed and consulted in the basement of the South-East
Quadrant. From 1867 until his retirement in 1880, there was a department
of Maps headed by R.H. Major. After 1880 maps and charts were demoted
to the status of sub-department. In 1892 most of the manuscript
maps were transferred to the Department of Manuscripts and the Map
Room became a division of the Department of Printed books. The fortunes
of the Map Room rose again in 1914, though, when it moved from the
South-East basement up to relatively spacious quarters in the then-new
King Edward VII building. There was even a plan to reunite the manuscript
and printed map collections, but this did not materialize. The Map
Room became the Map Library in 1973, when the British Library separated
administratively from the British Museum. In 1985 the Map Library
left the Department of Printed Books to become part of the newly
formed Special Collections together with manuscripts and in 1998
moved to the new British Library premises in Euston Road.