The event is free. I will be unravelling the mysterious plot that meant this celebrated work was a counter-revolutionary tool for absolute monarchy


  • Date:03/09/2025 06:00 PM
  • Location The Leeds Library, 18 Commercial St, Leeds LS1 6AL (Map)

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2025 marks 350 years since the publication of a novel volume of maps. Its creator, John Ogilby (1600-1676), was a man of many talents who reinvented himself throughout his eventful life.

The presentation will grow out of the coronation of Charles II, an event brought about by the collapse of enthusiasm for democratic ideals and the idea of a commonwealth rooted in an egalitarian morality. Legality and morality were replaced as the basis of authority and power by showmanship, and it was Ogilby’s job to put on the show.

Alan Ereira, author of ‘The nine lives of John Ogilby: Britain’s master map maker and his secrets’, demonstrates how Ogilby acquired the necessary skill set, starting out as a dancer and then becoming an impresario before turning to his final great accomplishment of publishing: ‘Britannia’ – a book of route maps. Our smart phone way finding of the twenty-first century bears a striking resemblance to these linear maps.

The presentation follows the curious route of Ogilby’s life, starting with how Ogilby’s trajectory is linked to the disintegration of the ancient cosmology and political philosophy on which that was based. Ogilby, like much of Europe, was caught up in the maelstrom of war, revolution, plague and fire.

In the last years of his life, he was commissioned by the King to provide a road-map for the whole country. But the roads chosen are not necessarily the most obvious or commercially useful. Why were these routes chosen? How do the political undercurrents of the seventeenth century depiction of the realm link to our digital world of information selection and presentation?