Adrian Tinniswood
Roads Less Travelled
The Nine Lives of John Ogilby: Britain’s Master Map Maker and His Secrets
By Alan Ereira
Duckworth Overlook 354pp £25
Historians of Restoration London know John Ogilby (c 1600–1676) for the marvellous post-Fire survey of the capital that he produced with his step-grandson, William Morgan, which was published in 1677; or as the choreographer of the celebrations accompanying Charles II’s coronation, of which the Earl of Clarendon said, ‘the whole Show was the most glorious … that had ever been seen in England’. Literary historians remember Ogilby for the series of translations of Virgil and Homer he produced in the 1650s and 1660s, lavish works that earned unwarranted sneers from later translators, including Dryden and Pope.
Scholars of 17th-century drama know him as the man responsible for opening Ireland’s first theatre in Dublin in 1637. And geographers remember him for the series of atlases he produced in the early 1670s, covering Africa, Japan, America, China and the rest of Asia, and for Britannia (1675), one of
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Was he really the finer artist, asks Tanya Harrod, or is it time Gwen emerged from her brother’s shadow?
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literaryreview.co.uk