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There are links to full Marc cataloguing records on Explore the British Library. Images from the collection are also tagged George III Topographical Collection We hope that the release of this material will facilitate research and greater understanding of these aspects of the past.ġ8,000 images are available via the file-sharing site Flickr, which you can find here Too many to mention, but here’s a sample: landscape, tourism, antiquarianism, architecture, rural life, fine art, agriculture, medieval and church studies, urban planning and development, industrialisation – canals and transport, military history, the history of collecting, the history of cartography, the Grand Tour, royal palaces and stately homes, science and invention, the history of exploration, American Independence.Īs a product of the 16th-19th centuries, the collection is also associated with imperialism, and the role of maps in facilitating imperialist activities both practically and ideologically. Nicholas Hawksmoor, 'The West front of Waping (Wapping) Church Stepney,' Aug. The collection is arranged geographically, with around 40% dedicated to the British Isles, one third covering the Europe of the Grand Tour, and 10% for British areas of influence such as North America, the West Indies and India. It totals around 40,000 printed and manuscript maps, views, charts, texts, architectural plans, prints, atlases and ephemera. It’s probably easier to list what isn’t in this collection. For more on the history of the collection see this post by Felicity Myrone. The collection was presented to the British Museum (from 1973 British Library) as a distinct part of the King's Library in 1823. The nucleus of the collection was assembled from 1660, but added to considerably after 1760 by the king’s librarians and agents. The King’s Topographical Collection (K.Top) is one part of the Geographical Collection of King George III (the other parts are the Maritime and Military collections). Thomas Milne, Milne's plan of the cities of London and Westminster.