The Times/1899/Obituary/Charles Henry Coote
Charles Henry Coote, of the British Museum, who died on Sunday obtained during his long service of 41 years in the Museum such an intimate acquaintance with the details of old maps that he became of the first authorities on the subject. In 1878 he published in the New Shakspere Society's Transactions a paper on "Shakspere's New Map in Twelfth Night"l in 1886, with Mr. E. Dalmar Morgan, he prepared for the Hakluyt Society "Early Voyages to Russia and Persia"; in 1888 he edited, with an introduction and bibliography, "A Reproduction of Johann Schöner's Globe of 1523"; in 1894 he published, with prologue and notes, "The Voyage from Lisbon to India, 1505-6, by Albericus Vespuccius"; and in 1894-95 he supplied the explanatory text to F. Muller and Co.'s reproductions of "Remarkable Maps of the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries." He also wrote the introduction to the Earl of Crawford's "Autotype Facsimiles of Three Mappemondes," recently issued. Mr Coote contributed many articles to the ninth edition of "Encyclopædia Britannica" and to the "Dictionary of National Biography," and he had been for several years a contributor to the Athenæum.
The Athenæum says that Mr.
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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