These beautifully-produced colouring books present over four volumes, thirty county maps of England & Wales. The maps were produced in the early 17th century by the cartographic engraver William Hole to accompany the vast landscape poem Poly-Olbion by Michael Drayton, one of the most famous poets of his age. Arguably the strangest maps of Britain ever designed, they depict the familiar rolling countryside as a playful fairyl&, bustling with otherworldly beings. Every topographical feature is anthropomorphised, a form of depiction known asprosopopeia: hills are represented as stout country gentlemen, rivers as water nymphs, forests as elegant huntresses. The poetry & maps of Poly-Olbion came out of the Renaissance vogue for chorography, the art of describing place, & together they provide one of the most detailed overviews of the rich landscape, history, & legends of Early Modern England & Wales. This is a colouring book to keep & treasure as a complex, endlessly rewarding work of art.