The Laxton Map

Mark Pierce

1635

Map

Laxton lies about nine miles north of Newark on Trent in Nottinghamshire. When this map was made, the arable land was farmed in large open fields without internal hedges or boundaries; it was worked ‘in common’. Uniquely, part of Laxton was never enclosed, and is still farmed according to the open field system.

The map is made of nine sections. It was commissioned by Sir William Courten, who as owner of the estate was monitoring and regulating the working of the open fields. The scale is roughly sixteen inches to the mile, and individual strips of land are clearly visible, as well as pasture, woodland, individual trees, streams, roads, buildings, animals, and people working the land. An accompanying ‘terrier’, or land register, records who farmed each parcel of land, and where they dwelt.

An introduction to The Laxton Map by Nick Millea, Bodleian Map Librarian.

Comments

What makes this a treasure?

Astounding to me at all levels. Thanks for the very informative video.

Posted by Cynthia G

On 20/04/2013

Thank you for sharing the Laxton Map & for the video explaining about it. Fascinating!

Posted by Zoe S Miles

On 04/12/2011

What does cartography mean?

Posted by Freddie cr

On 17/10/2011

It is superbly constructed, simply as a piece of cartography. It is incredibly accurate and not only is it accurate, it’s a gorgeous thing to look at. Look at the colours. It tells such a story and there’s a huge amount of information in here: geographical, historical, social – it’s all there. And the fact is that a map can bring all this together and hit you with one great visual hit. It’s a marvellous thing and can mean all sorts of different things to people looking at it at the same time.

Posted by Nick Millea

On 05/09/2011

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