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John Speed's maps

Thank you, Mike. I notice that John Speed was particular in including Halls. Perhaps that reflects the values of the time.
 
Just found an article about that via the Birmingham Post John Speed's 17th century maps to be made available online

A 400-year-old atlas which maps out the West Midlands in the early 17th century is being made available online for the first time.
Historian John Speed created the plan of each county town illustrating rivers, bridges, famous battlegrounds and prehistoric sites.

Warwickshire, Worcestershire, Staffordshire and Shropshire feature prominently while Birmingham then Bermicham – was part of Warwickshire and no more than a single street about a quarter of a mile long lined with “blacksmiths, cutlers, lorimers, spurriers and nailers’”
Speed’s Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain is one of the world’s greatest cartographic treasures – considered priceless. Cambridge University Library which houses one of only five surviving proof sets, has turned them into digital form available online.
Dr Sarah Bendall, fellow and development director at Emmanuel College Cambridge, said: “Speed didn’t survey all of the town plans himself – some he took from other sources. The ones he did himself he put a scale bar on.
"We know he was in Warwick on June 17, 1607, because he got an official pass from the town clerk giving him permission to survey. He surveyed towns not mapped previously and investigated the coats of arms of nobility.

“We also know he did Lichfield and Stafford in 1607. Birmingham would have been very small on the map – it was spelt Bermicham, just in Warwickshire on the border of Worcestershire.
“The maps are very different to now – the way they show molehills and parks and didn’t have contour lines. Speed was interested in the history and local antiquities. Interestingly he didn’t put on roads, only the rivers and bridges which is slightly odd.”
Places that are now suburbs of Birmingham lay outside; Harborne and Handsworth in Staffordshire, King’s Norton and Moseley in Worcestershire.
Speed noted 18 market towns in Warwickshire, the chief of these was Coventry with a population of about 6,000.

At Leamington and Kings Newnham there were spas which provided rest and relaxation and whose contemporary fame was surpassed only by Bath and Buxton in Derbyshire.
The countryside bursts with human life, for example a ploughman and his two-horse team are at work in fields outside Worcester.
While the map of Herefordshire shows the geographical boundaries of the county, its heritage and a map inset reveals Hereford was the biggest town at the time.
There is also historical reference to a battle fought between prominent nobles on the borders, in which 3800 men were slain.





 
Thats fascinating, Ell. Thank you. I had no idea that Birmingham was ever that tiny. Interesting that the coat of arms study may well have linked into Speeds's interest in the halls of the gentry.
 
Yeah it is. I've had a look at some of the maps - mainly Warwickshire, Worcestershire and Staffordshire.

On the Worcestershire map was a wood called "Norton Woode part of Pershore Hundred". Within the wood is Moseley and Kings Norton.

Halesowen is sandwiched between Worcestershire and Staffordshire, but is in Shropshire!

Dudley is within Staffordshire, but belonged to Worcestershire!

Bromsgrove is within Worcestershire, but belongs to Staffordshire!
 
In one of Victor Skipp's books, I think it is The History of Birmingham down to 1830 gives a map of Birmingham as it was, with all the areas such as Edgbaston and Aston around, so you can see how much was absorbed into what was a very small place. Some years ago, I think it was on the Warwicshire Rootweb list, somone said they have a letter addressed to a person in Birmingham - around 1700 I think and it was addressed to the person, Birmingham near Bewdley. That says it all.
 
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