|
Description
Title: Birdseye View of University of Virginia, Charlottesville & Monticello 1856 Artist/Publisher: Edward Sachse & Co. Date: 1856 Map Type: Reproduction from Original Lithograph Orig Size: 30" x 22.5" (full margins) Size: 30" x 22.5" Description: This reproduction bird’s eye view of UVA in 1856 is drawn from Lewis Mountain showing the main rotunda of the library and the many student buildings with colonnade fronts. The city of Charlottesville in the rear and in the distant hills, just right of center is Jefferson’s Monticello. These antique birdseye maps record the evolution of cities illustrating the development and nature of economic activities, educational and religious facilities, parks, street patterns and widths, and transportation systems. Perspective maps are often not drawn to scale but provide a fascinating glimpse into the history of these towns and cities. This reproduction historic map is a Giclee or fine art print on heavy weight 100% rag paper with Ultra Chrome inks with light fastness ratings of up to 100 years. We enlarge and reduce from the original and do not distort or resize the image, therefore most prints are not exact standard sizes. Larger sizes shipped rolled in tube.
About The University of Virginia: Thomas Jefferson set to work on building plans that would mirror his philosophical vision. For Jefferson, the college experience should take place within an "academical village," a place where shared learning infused daily life. Plans were developed for ten Pavilions—stately faculty homes with living quarters upstairs and classrooms downstairs—attached to two rows of student rooms and connected by an inward-facing colonnade. Each Pavilion was identified with a subject to be studied and inhabited by the professor who taught that subject.
At the head of the shared lawn would stand the library (not, as in most other colleges and universities of the time, a chapel), its dome shape inspired by Rome's Pantheon and symbolic of the enlightened human mind. The plans grew to include two more colonnades of student rooms facing outwards and attached to a set of "hotels" where private businessmen served food for the students. Jefferson corresponded with scholars in America and Europe, seeking the best faculty to teach in the areas of philosophy, arts, foreign languages, science, law, and medicine. Construction and transatlantic travel delayed the date of opening, but in March 1825, the University of Virginia opened to serve its first 123 students. For more than its first year of operation, Thomas Jefferson was a living legacy among University students and faculty. Each Sunday, he hosted students for dinner at Monticello. Among those students was Edgar Allan Poe, a University student in 1826. Poe was among the students, too, who journeyed up the mountain to pay their respects at the funeral of their University's founder, who died on July 4, 1826. Source: University of Virginia, “A Short History of U.VA”
Available in 3 sizes; - 30" x 22.5" (large) $38.00 - 22" x 16" (medium) $30.00 - 16" x 12" (small) $23.00
|