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A New Map of the ENGLISH PLANTATIONS in/ AMERICA./ both Continent and Ilands,/ Shewing their true Situation and distance, from/ England or one with another
A New Map of the ENGLISH PLANTATIONS in/ AMERICA./ both Continent and Ilands,/ Shewing their true Situation and distance, from/ England or one with another

A New Map of the ENGLISH PLANTATIONS in/ AMERICA./ both Continent and Ilands,/ Shewing their true Situation and distance, from/ England or one with another

Date1673
Cartographer Robert Morden (d. 1703)
Cartographer William Berry (fl. 1669 - 1708)
MediumLine engraving on laid paper with hand color
DimensionsOverall: 17 7/16 × 21 1/8in. (44.3 × 53.7cm) Framed: 26 1/8 × 29 3/8 × 7/8in.
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number2000-17
DescriptionThe upper left cartouche reads: "A New Map of the ENGLISH PLANTATIONS in/ AMERICA./ both Continent and Ilands,/ Shewing their true Situation and distance, from/ England or one with another,/ By Robert Morden, at the Atlas. in Cornhill/ nere the Royal Exchange, and William Berry/ at the Atlas. in Corhill/ nere the Royal Exchange, and William Berry/ at the Globe. between York House and the New/ Exchange in the Strand, LONDON."
Label TextWhile Robert Morden and William Berry's A New Map of the English Plantations in America illustrates no territory identified as being inhabited by Natives, the cartouche is decorated solely with depictions of Indians. Several are pictured holding a banner containing the title of the map. Depicting them in this manner subtly suggests that they support or uphold the claim suggested by the title contained within the banner - that the geography illustrated belonged to England.

The majority of cartouches on seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century maps of America contain decorative images of the Native population. By the middle of the eighteenth century, most of the ornamentation used depicted the slave populations.