.jpg/300px-Bedford_-_John_Speed's_map_(1611).jpg)
Speed's map of "Bedforde", 1611
John Speed (1552–1629) was a
historian, now best remembered as the
cartographer whose maps of English counties are
often found framed in homes throughout the United Kingdom.
He was
born at Farndon,
Cheshire
, and went
into his father's tailoring business where he
worked until he was about 50. While working in
London
, his knowledge of history led him into learned
circles and he joined the Society of Antiquaries where his
interests came to the attention of Sir Fulke Greville, who
subsequently made Speed an allowance to enable him to devote his
whole attention to research. As a reward for his earlier
efforts, Queen Elizabeth granted him the use of a room in the
Custom House. It was with the encouragement of
William Camden that he began his
Historie
of Great Britaine, which was published in 1611. Although Speed
probably had access to historical sources that are now lost to us
he certainly used the work of
Saxton and
Norden, his work as a historian is considered
mediocre and secondary in importance to his map-making, of which
his most important contribution is probably his
town plans, many of which provide the first visual
record of the British towns they depict.
His atlas
The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine was
published in 1610/11 and contained the first set of individual
county maps of England and Wales besides maps of Ireland [5 in all]
and a general map of Scotland. Most, but not all, of the county
maps have town plans on them; those showing a
Scale of
Passes being the places he had mapped himself. Just before his
death in 1627 Speed published
A Prospect of the Most Famous
Parts of the World which was the first world atlas produced by
an Englishman. There is a fascinating text describing the areas
shown on the back of the maps in English although a rare edition of
1616 of the British maps has a Latin text - this is believed to
have been produced for the Continental market.
In 1611, he also published
The genealogies recorded in the
Sacred Scriptures according to euery family and tribe with the line
of Our Sauior Iesus Christ obserued from Adam to the Blessed Virgin
Mary, a biblical genealogy, reprinted several times during the
17th century.
John Speed
is buried with his wife in St Giles-without-Cripplegate
church within the Barbican Estate
in the City of London
. A memorial to John Speed was also erected
behind the altar of the church. According to the church's web site
"[his was] one of the few memorials [in the church] that survived
the bombing" of London during
The Blitz of
1940-1941.... The web site also notes that "[t]he cast for the
niche in which the bust is placed was provided by the Merchant
Taylors’ Company, of which John Speed was a member."
John Speed
was a seventh generation ancestor of John Speed, a judge, of
Farmington, now a
suburb of Louisville,
Kentucky
; Joshua Fry Speed,
his son, befriended Abraham Lincoln
upon his arrival in Springfield, Illinois
, who in turn appointed Joshua's brother, James Speed, to the post of Attorney General of the
United States.
Image:John
Speed's map of Oxford, 1605..jpg|The River Cherwell
(bottom left), Magdalen Bridge
(left), and Christ Church Meadow
(top left) are marked on John
Speed's map of 1605. Headington Hill
and Marston
are off the
left hand side of the map.Image:John Speed's map of Cardiff
1610.jpg|
John Speed's map of 1610 of
CardiffFile:Carmarthen.1610.Speed.map.jpg|John Speed's 1610 map of
Carmarthen.
File:Friars-speed1610.jpg|Detail from John
Speed map of 1610, the only surviving image of the original school
building Friars
School, Bangor
File:Speed Northampton.jpg|John Speeds 17th
century map of Northamptonshire
File:James Speed.jpg|
James SpeedFile:Joshua Fry Speed.png|
Joshua Fry Speed
References
- Johan Speed, Nigel Nicolson (introduction), The Counties of
Britain: A Tudor Atlas, Thames & Hudson (1989): ISBN
0-500-25104-5; Pavilion Books (1992): ISBN 1-85145-131-5 (pbk,
1995): ISBN 1-85793-612-4
External links