Chart shewing the amount of the exports & imports of England to and from all parts (from 1800 to 1805.) To face page 213.

Fold-out, hand-colored engraved chart showing exports and imports for England from 1800 to 1805. Charts axes are time and money. (Although title delineates the years represented as between 1800 and 1805, the x axis, time, begins with the year 1700.) The data appears as a watery, light green stream w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Playfair, William, 1759-1823, Marchant, W.
Format: Map
Language:unknown
Published: Greenland and Norris 1805
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~347500~90114922
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Description
Summary:Fold-out, hand-colored engraved chart showing exports and imports for England from 1800 to 1805. Charts axes are time and money. (Although title delineates the years represented as between 1800 and 1805, the x axis, time, begins with the year 1700.) The data appears as a watery, light green stream within the chart. Descriptive text accompanies the stream to clarify its visual representation. Chart is 27 x 48 cm, on sheet 35 x 53, folded to 26 x 19. William Playfair's An inquiry into the permanent causes of the decline and fall of powerful and wealthy nations . , published in London by Greenland and Norris, 1805. First edition; second edition published in 1807. Pagination: [i-iii], iv-xx, [1], 2-301, with [4] fold-out leaves of plates throughout. Includes a preface, table of contents, and historical text, followed by an index. Marbled page edges, now faded. This copy has embossing on title page: Library of the University of Detroit. Plates contain four hand-colored engraved charts showing worldwide economic histories and international relationships, as well as the populations and square miles of nations. The exquisite graphics convey the data through easily comprehensible visuals, which are also stunningly beautiful in pastel hues. William Playfair was the inventor of statistical graphs, and thus a pioneer in infographics and data visualization. "Playfair’s charts can thus be understood as a direct response to the profusion of knowledge and information that we associate with the Enlightenment specifically and with the eighteenth century more generally. This seeming explosion of information—the sheer proliferation of raw data—is, of course, what enables Playfair’s time-series graphs" (Sachs). Full text transcription available via Project Gutenberg: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/16575/16575-h/16575-h.htm http://www.branchcollective.org/?ps_articles=jonathan-sachs-17861801-william-playfair-statistical-graphics-and-the-meaning-of-an-event