Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

City Maps - Order out of Chaos

Episode 2 of 4

Documentary series. The Morgan Map of 1682, John Rocque's detailed 1746 map and Stephen Walter's contemporary image offer three visions of London.

Documentary series charting the visual appeal and historical meaning of maps.

The British Library is home to a staggering 4.5 million maps, most of which remain hidden away in its colossal basement, and the programme delves behind the scenes to explore some amazing treasures in more detail. This is the story of three maps, three 'visions' of London over three centuries; visions of beauty that celebrate but also distort the truth. It's the story of how urban maps try to impose order on chaos.

On Sunday 2 September 1660, the Great Fire of London began reducing most of the city to ashes, and among the huge losses were many maps of the city itself. The Morgan Map of 1682 was the first to show the whole of the City of London after the fire. Consisting of sixteen separate sheets, measuring eight feet by five feet, it took six years to complete. Morgan's beautiful map symbolised the hoped-for ideal city.

In 1746 John Rocque produced what was at the time the most detailed map ever made of London. Like Morgan's, Rocque's map is all neo-Classical beauty and clinical precision, but the London it represented had become the opposite. In engravings of the time, such as Night, the artist William Hogarth shows a city boiling with vice and corruption. Stephen Walter's contemporary image, The Island, plays with notions of cartographic order and respectability. His extraordinary London map looks at first glance to be just as precise and ordered as his hero Rocque's but, looking closer, it includes 21st-century markings, such as 'favourite kebab vans' and sites of 'personal heartbreak'.

35 minutes

Music Played

  • Camille Saint鈥怱a毛ns

    Carnival of the Animals: The Aquarium

Credits

Role Contributor
Director Steven Clarke
Producer Steven Clarke
Executive Producer Harry Bell

Broadcasts

  • Tue 20 Apr 2010 20:30
  • Tue 20 Apr 2010 22:50
  • Tue 20 Apr 2010 23:30
  • Sun 25 Apr 2010 20:30
  • Tue 27 Apr 2010 19:00
  • Wed 16 Jun 2010 19:00
  • Sun 18 Jul 2010 19:00
  • Sun 10 Oct 2010 19:30
  • Thu 14 Oct 2010 20:00
  • Thu 14 Oct 2010 23:00
  • Tue 18 Jan 2011 19:30
  • Mon 16 May 2011 22:00
  • Wed 29 Jun 2011 19:30
  • Mon 1 Aug 2011 22:30
  • Tue 27 Sep 2011 23:20
  • Mon 31 Oct 2011 23:00
  • Sat 5 Nov 2011 19:00
  • Sun 6 Nov 2011 00:30
  • Tue 21 Apr 2020 19:30
  • Fri 28 Aug 2020 02:05
  • Mon 18 Oct 2021 01:20
  • Mon 4 Apr 2022 01:45