ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9780715651100
RRP: £20.00
PAGES: 304
PUBLICATION DATE:
August 25, 2016
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The Nine Lives of John Ogilby: Britain’s Master Mapmaker and His Secrets
Alan Ereira
John Ogilby’s life is an astonishing picaresque adventure which is so fantastic as to be unbelievable. And yet very little is known about the man himself and his legacy has faded into obscurity. Alan Ereira’s fascinating biography is about to change all that. Ogilby created himself out of nothing three times; by the lottery ticket that allowed an 11-year-old urchin to buy an apprenticeship and dance at court, by the translation that turned a 48-year-old shipwrecked prisoner into a national poet, and by the swift mastery of surveying that turned a 65-year-old homeless victim of the Great Fire into the man who was paid to map London. Perhaps best known for creating the most celebrated road atlas of England and Wales, Britannia, this apparently harmless book turned out to be a well-researched handbook for where to land a French army of conquest in accordance with the secret treaty between Charles II and Louis XIV. Alan Ereira unpicks the hidden details of this incredible man for the first time. Living through war in Europe, England and Ireland, surviving plague, fire, explosions and imprisonment, everything he did was driven by his vision of cosmic order.The Nine Lives of John Ogilby will shock, entertain and inform.
Reviews of The Nine Lives of John Ogilby: Britain’s Master Mapmaker and His Secrets
'A jolly read, spectacularly well thought out.' Terry Jones, writer for Terry Jones' Medieval Lives and Terry Jones' Barbarians 'Marvellous – the lessons of book history made clear.' Professor Charles W.J. Withers, Ogilvie Chair of Human Geography at Edinburgh
Alan Ereira
Alan Ereira is an award-winning British author, historian and documentary filmmaker. He collaborated with Terry Jones on the documentary series Crusades (1995), Terry Jones’ Medieval Lives (2004) and Terry Jones’ Barbarians (2006), with whom he also co-authored the respective companion books.