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Nathaniel Hill
British, 1708-1768
Pocket Globe
1754
Paper maché, engraving on paper with hand-coloring, housed in a fish skin case
Sarah Campbell Blaffer Foundation
2012.3
Pocket globes were developed in the 17th century and gained great popularity in the 18th century, almost exclusively in Britain. The terrestrial globe was often fitted into a case that itself was lined with the two hemispheres of a celestial globe. The small size of pocket globes kept them from serious navigational use, but they could be used for children's education and were a mark of a wealthy gentleman's interest in geography and exploration.
Nathaniel Hill's London trad card described him as a "Globe Maker, & Engraver," who "Makes and Sells all Sorts of Mathematical Instruments in Silver, Brass, Ivory or Wood." It advertised "Estates Survey'd, and Maps, Neatly Drawn, and Engrav'd."
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