Battle of Auerstedt (Auerstadt) 14 October 1806. An engraved and hand-coloured map 41, A. K. Johnston, Atlas to Alison’s History of Europe, 1850
£10.70 – £38.30
High quality reproduction of an antique hand-coloured map of Battle of Auerstadt (Auerstedt) 14 October 1806 – a historical illustration (map plate 41), engraved by A.K. Johnston for Atlas to Alison’s History of Europe, published by W. Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh & London, in 1850.
Printed area (image as on the main picture) measures:
Extra Large poster (or Canvas) 23.7×31.2 inch / 60.3×79.3 cm (approx. same sheet size)
Large poster (or Canvas) 18.0×23.7 inch / 45.6×60.3 cm (approx. same sheet size)
Medium poster (or Canvas) 11.7×15.4 inch / 29.7×39.0 cm (sheet size no less than A3 / 11.7×16.5 inch)
Small poster 8.3×10.9 inch / 21x 27.6 cm (sheet size no less than A4 / 8.3×11.7)
Please select from drop-down box below.
Battle of Auerstedt (Auerstadt) 14 October 1806. An engraved and hand-coloured map 41, A. K. Johnston, Atlas to Alison’s History of Europe, 1850
£10.70 – £38.30
High quality reproduction of an antique hand-coloured map of Battle of Auerstadt (Auerstedt) 14 October 1806 – a historical illustration (map plate 41), engraved by A.K. Johnston for Atlas to Alison’s History of Europe, published by W. Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh & London, in 1850.
Printed area (image as on the main picture) measures:
Extra Large poster (or Canvas) 23.7×31.2 inch / 60.3×79.3 cm (approx. same sheet size)
Large poster (or Canvas) 18.0×23.7 inch / 45.6×60.3 cm (approx. same sheet size)
Medium poster (or Canvas) 11.7×15.4 inch / 29.7×39.0 cm (sheet size no less than A3 / 11.7×16.5 inch)
Small poster 8.3×10.9 inch / 21x 27.6 cm (sheet size no less than A4 / 8.3×11.7)
Please select from drop-down box below.
Description
Battle of Auerstadt (Auerstedt) 14 October 1806 (map plate 41), engraved by A.K. Johnston for Atlas to Alison’s History of Europe, published by W. Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh & London, in 1850.
Alexander Keith Johnston (1804 – 1871) was a Scottish geographer and cartographer. His initial interest to geography was inspired by inaccuracy of maps Johnston used in his early years hiking in West Highlands. After graduating from University of Edinburgh he joined his brother in printing business “W. & A. K. Johnston” which used the clan motto “Ready Aye Ready” as their logo. The rest of Johnston’s life was devoted to geography and map making. Among other works, Johnston created the first English language physical globe of the world, and an atlas of military geography to accompany Alison’s History of Europe, first published in 1848. The company W & A K Johnston were appointed engravers to King William IV and Johnston was later elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
The Battle of Auerstadt (Auerstedt) was fought on 14th of October 1806, north of Jena, near village of Auerstedt, Prussia (today’s Germany), between French army’s III Corps (26.000) under Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout and Prussian forces (60.500) led by King Frederick William III of Prussia and General Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick. Simultaneously a dozen miles away was fought the Battle of Jena (therefore, Battle of Jena – Auerstedt). The Battle of Auerstedt started in the morning of October 14th when marching French troops first encountered Prussian cavalry in heavy fog. During the following battle the Prussian commanders made a few piecemeal attacks but the French in squares repelled them for 6 hours. By 10a.m. the Duke of Brunswick was mortally wounded, the Prussian command has broken down, and the French were able to counterattack. The Prussian army collapsed and the King Frederick has ordered a withdrawal, losing 13.000 men killed or wounded, as well as 115 guns. Initially Napoleon didn’t believe the news of Davout’s Corps victory over the main Prussian force. Davout was made Duke of Auerstadt, and his III Corps were first to enter Berlin when French triumphally marched in on 25 October 1806. Battle of Jena – Auerstedt marked a major turning point in Napoleonic Wars (1803 – 1815).
This poster is a high quality “giclee” reproduction of a painstakingly restored antique original, custom-printed on Standard Single-weight Matt Coated art paper 140gsm or Heavyweight Matt Coated art paper 230gsm (more of a thin card density), or superb Epson Matt Canvas 320gsm, according to your choice. We use the latest UltraChromeHDX pigment inks which guarantee 60 years of colour permanence (up to 200 years fade-proof for colour prints). This poster is suitable for mounting and framing, as well as direct display on a wall.
IMPORTANT: If you are going to frame this print we thoroughly recommend art paper 230gsm or canvas 320gsm. The 140gsm art paper option makes sense if you wish to DIY-frame or to tack the poster to a wall without framing, due to it being lighter and more flexible. All three options are giclee prints of the same high quality.
POSTER PRINT QUALITY
Please note that our reproduction posters are made to order and every print is checked before posting. The images we use in most cases are scans of antique originals, professionally restored in order to remove the most evident stains, folds, tears and other damage. We strive to balance the restoration and saving the overall integrity and antique appearance of the original. Our restored images are unique and these prints can be purchased only from www.VictorianMaps.com.
There will be no watermark on your image but there might be a white border depending on aspect ratio of the original. Please note that when a large antique original is reduced to a smaller size print some text may not be readable. Please check our measurements: every poster has its own aspect ratio same as original and printed exactly as pictured.
Additional information
XLarge, Large, Medium, Small
Art Paper 140gsm, Art Paper 230gsm, Canvas 320gsm