1606. Mercator’s Atlas. Map
of Southern Scotland.
1654. Blaeu’s Atlas—
(4) Teviotia vulgo Tivedail.
Auct. Tim. Pont. Io. Blaeu, excudit.
(5) Tvedia cum Vicecomitatu
Etterico Forestae etiam Selkirkae dictus. (Twee-Dail with the Sherifdome of
Etterik-Forrest, called also Selkirk.) Auct. Timotheo Pont.
(6) Laudelia sive Lauderdalia,
Scotis vulgo Lauderdail. Auct. Tim. Pont.
(7) Mercia, vulgo
Vicecomitatus Bervicensis. Auct. Tim. Pont.
1715. John Adair.
Peebles-shire. Published with History of County, by A. Pennycuick, M.D.
1725. Hermann Moll’s Atlas—
(7) The North Part of the
Shire of Roxburgh, and the Shire of Selkirk, called also Etterick Forrest.
(9) Liddesdale, which is the
South Part of Roxburghshire.
(10) The Mers or March and
Lauderdale.
(12) Tweeddale, alias the.
Shire of Peebles, &c. 1741. Edgar. Peebles-shire or Tweedale, surveyed by
Wm. Edgar. Scale 1 inch to a mile. Dedicated to the Earl of Traquair.
1770. Stobie. Roxburghshire,
by Matthew Stobie, Land Surveyor, engraved by John Hayly. Scale 1 inch to a
mile. 4 sheets.
1772. Ainslie. Map of
Selkirkshire or Ettrick Forest, from a Survey taken in the year 1772, by
John Ainslie. Scale 1 inch to a mile. 2 sheets.
1774. Armstrong. A new map of
the County of Peebles, by Capt. Armstrong. 2 sheets.
1794. Statistical Account of
Scotland. Contains some Parish Maps by Local Authorities.
1832. Thomson's Atlas of
Scotland—
Roxburghshire, in 2 sheets,
by Messrs Kinghome, Cranston, & Clark.
Peeblesshire, by Messrs
Little, Johnstone, Knox, & Johnson.
Selkirkshire, by Lord Napier,
J. C. Scott of Sinton, and Messrs Mitchell & Kinghome.
1845. New Statistical Account
of Scotland. Maps of the Counties, by W. H. Lizars.
1850-60. Ordnance Survey, on
scale of 6 inches to a mile.
Roxburghshire, 48 sheets ;
Peeblesshire, 27 sheets ; Selkirkshire, 24 sheets.
1863-69. Ordnance Survey, on
scale of 1 inch to a mile. Sheets 24, 25, 16, 17, II.
1895. Bartholomew, J. G.,
Royal Scottish Geographical Society’s Atlas of Scotland, scale 2 miles to an
inch, where a full Bibliography of Atlases of Scotland is given, pp. 16-18. |