File:1800 Map of Peninsular India-1795.jpg

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Summary

Title
A Map of the Peninsula of India from the 19th Degree North Latitude to Cape Comorin.
Description
English: This map (noted as "Third Edition"), created immediately after the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War (1798–1799), is based on the 1793 Faden map (without any version note), created immediately after the Third Anglo-Mysore War (1789-92) and the subsequent division of and territorial loss by the Kingdom of Mysore through the 1792 Treaty of Seringapatam. The only difference from the older map is in political territory, showing vast expansion of the territory of the British East India Company (over that gained by the 1792 Treaty of Seringapatam), and the now much smaller Princely State of Mysore, after the Kingdom of Mysore having further lost territory to the East India Company's Madras Presidency, and one of the company's allies in the Anglo-Mysore Wars, the Princely state (from 1798) of Hyderabad state (contemporary sources refer to its hereditary ruler, the Nizam (of Hyderabad) in place of his territories).

The original 1773 map, with this map showing only territorial changes, was, according to the notes on the map, "compiled chiefly from papers communicated by the late Sir Archibald Campbell, the surveys of Col. Kelly, Capt. Pringle, Capt. Allan, etc." by Major James Rennell, and not based on his own surveys as Surveyor-General of the British East India Company, which were conducted in the Ganges basin.

Description from Geographicus: This is James Rennell's magnificent mapping of the Indian subcontinent, one of the largest and most impressive maps of India to appear in the 18th century. Highly desirable third edition. Presented in two panels, as issued. This chart depicts the subcontinent from Bombay ( Mumbai ) and Aurangabad, south including the northern half of Sri Lanka (Ceylon). Color coded according to political territory, noting British Possessions (red), the territory claimed by the independent holdout Rajah of Mysore (Purple), the Marhatta Countries (Green), the Nizam Dominions (Orange), the Carnatick (Yellow), and the Travancore (Blue). Includes the routes of various military marches and campaigns relating to the British conquest of India, including the 1784 March of British Prisoners from Condapoor to Madras, the march of the Marquis of Cornwallis, the march of General Medows, and the march of General Abercromby. Also shows the acquisitions of the British through the Partition Treaty of 1792. This map was engraved by R. Baker and printed in by William Faden, “Royal Geographer to the King and to the Prince of Wales”. The whole is masterfully presented in visually stunning almost three dimensional engraving and stunning period color. A must for any serious collection of South Asia maps. Compiled by James Rennell from papers communicated by the late Sir Archibald Campbell, the surveys of Col. Kelly, Capt. Pringle, Capt. Allan, etc.
Date
Source

Faden, W., General Atlas, 1800.

Creator
publisher: William Faden, Charing Cross, London
 Geotemporal data
Bounding box
N: 19.5217528°N
W: 71.6556902°E E: 82.4420503°E
S: 7.555262°N
Georeferencing View the georeferenced map in the Wikimaps Warper
 Archival data
Accession number
Geographicus link: India-faden-1795
Dimensions height: 40 in (101.6 cm); width: 33 in (83.8 cm)
dimensions QS:P2048,40U218593
dimensions QS:P2049,33U218593
Other versions
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Licensing

This is a faithful photographic reproduction of a two-dimensional, public domain work of art. The work of art itself is in the public domain for the following reason:
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File history

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current11:06, 29 December 2018Thumbnail for version as of 11:06, 29 December 20185,936 × 7,137 (50.39 MB)wikimediacommons>Shyamal== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Map |artist={{User:Multichill/Geographicus/cartographers|1=rennell.txt|subst=}} |title= A Map of the Peninsula of India from the 19th Degree North Latitude to Cape Comorin. |description= {{en| This map (noted as "Third Edition"), created immediately after the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War (1798–1799), is based on the 1793 Faden map (without any version note), created...