
Later full-size copies of the panorama, as shown on the BDCM’s website, had a total length ‘upwards of eight feet’.įigure 1: An advertisement by Illustrated London News for their publication of the Panorama of London. Besides this, a nine-page ‘History of London’ was printed, as well as a Key to the Panorama which provided place names for each significant scene or building in the panorama. James Frederick Smyth was originally commissioned by the Illustrated London News to produce the Panorama of London as a 12-page supplement.


On January 11 th, 1845, upon the beginning of its third year of publication, readers were able to pay One Penny to purchase a copy of the Panorama of London or receive a free copy if they subscribed to the weekly Illustrated London News. Their magazines, often jeering and comical in style, were well known for their eclectic and extravagant displays of London life, politics, and royalty.
#Knight lab storymap only shows first tile of zoomify series#
This blogpost discusses the history of the London panorama, as well as the processes used to digitise a colourised copy, held as part of the Bill Douglas and Peter Jewell Collection at The Bill Douglas Cinema Museum (BDCM).ĭespite its name, much of the contents of the popular Illustrated London News magazine series pertained to events happening around the world, particularly the far-reaching parts of the British Empire. The initial Panorama of London produced in 1845 by James Frederick Smyth and printed by William Little of 198 Strand, London, was commissioned by the Illustrated London News, the world’s first illustrated weekly news magazine. In the blog-post below, Ollie Anthony, Technical Assistant at the Digital Humanities Lab and former BDCM museum volunteer, explains the significance of the panorama and the digitisation process involved in creating the interactive map.

We are delighted to present an interactive map of the print of Smyth’s Panorama of London held in The Bill Douglas Cinema Museum’s collection (see here: EXEBD 12796):
