You should see what church rubbings are cataloged under. As what you have is the same - it is a reproduction of the original. And there are likely others out there - I can think of several examples of rubbings of Chinese stone engraved / petroglyph maps in libraries. The Osher Map may have one. I vaguely remember one being given to the library in the early 2000s. Best George ------- Dr. George S. Carhart Engineering Archivist Department of Public Works Engineering City of Portland, Maine [log in to unmask] P: (207) 874-8682 F: (207) 874-8852 On Fri, Jul 21, 2017 at 7:19 AM, Angela R Cope <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Hi have a map that is a rubbing from a stone. So, it's a one of a kind, > hand done rubbing but a reproduction of a map on stone. > > > So is it a manuscript or is the rubbing method simply the printing process? > > > Help. > > > Angie > -- Notice: Under Maine law, documents - including e-mails - in the possession of public officials or city employees about government business may be classified as public records. There are very few exceptions. As a result, please be advised that what is written in an e-mail could be released to the public and/or the media if requested.