Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2010
In a previous contribution Professor E. G. R. Taylor has reviewed the development of the sea chart up to 1600, the year in which Edward Wright published his celebrated chart of the world on Mercator's projection. Wright's chart represents one of many minor incursions on the part of English cartographers into the field of nautical cartography, which at that time and for the next hundred years was dominated by the flourishing Dutch school of hydrography. It was not until the latter began to decline towards the end of the seventeenth century that the English cartographer really came into his own and began to produce charts to assist the navigator. Thus the evolution of the English nautical chart to its present state of development covers a relatively short span when measured against the whole background of maritime enterprise and endeavour.
The development over the past two hundred and fifty years has been sporadic rather than continuous, being characterized by sudden advances followed by long intervals of consolidation. Factors such as the needs of national defence, the invention of navigational instruments and advances in hydrographic surveying technique, have at various times acted as stimulants to chart evolution. Throughout the period under review responsibility for supplying the navigator with accurate charts has gradually passed from the many private publishing firms to a specially created national department.