Difference between revisions of "Edward Conway 1594-1655"
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[[File:ConwayEdward2nd1.jpg| thumb |One of the armorial stamps of Edward Conway (British Armorial Bindings)]] | [[File:ConwayEdward2nd1.jpg| thumb |One of the armorial stamps of Edward Conway (British Armorial Bindings)]] | ||
====Biographical Note==== | ====Biographical Note==== | ||
− | Son of [[crossreference::Edward Conway]], 1st Viscount Conway, of [[location::Ragley, Warwickshire]], from whom he inherited the title and family estates in 1631. Matriculated at [[education::Queen's College, Oxford]] 1611, but did not graduate; his education was continued in [[location:: | + | Son of [[crossreference::Edward Conway ca.1564-1631|Edward Conway]], 1st Viscount Conway, of [[location::Ragley, Warwickshire]], from whom he inherited the title and family estates in 1631. Matriculated at [[education::Queen's College, Oxford]] 1611, but did not graduate; his education was continued in [[location::the Netherlands]], where his father was serving. Knighted in 1618, he was [[occupation::MP]] for [[location::Warwick]] in 1624, and for other constituencies thereafter. He spent much of the 1630s in [[location::London]] or at his estates in [[location::Ireland]]; during the Civil War he undertook several actions supporting the King, and in the later 1640s was increasingly in financial difficulty, after paying fines. He went to [[location::France]] in the early 1650s and died there. |
====Books==== | ====Books==== |
Latest revision as of 22:09, 14 August 2020
Edward CONWAY, 2nd Viscount Conway 1594-1655
Biographical Note
Son of Edward Conway, 1st Viscount Conway, of Ragley, Warwickshire, from whom he inherited the title and family estates in 1631. Matriculated at Queen's College, Oxford 1611, but did not graduate; his education was continued in the Netherlands, where his father was serving. Knighted in 1618, he was MP for Warwick in 1624, and for other constituencies thereafter. He spent much of the 1630s in London or at his estates in Ireland; during the Civil War he undertook several actions supporting the King, and in the later 1640s was increasingly in financial difficulty, after paying fines. He went to France in the early 1650s and died there.
Books
Conway is noted as a learned man, who (according to Clarendon) "reserved so much of his time for books and study that he was well-versed in the parts of learning". He befriended and patronised numerous authors and his library included many literary works, including poems, plays and romances. He accumulated one of the largest libraries of his generation, and a list of 1643 (when his books were seized) runs to over 5000 volumes; a manuscript catalogue of his library at Lisnegarvey, near Antrim runs to ca.9000 books. This catalogue is now in the Robinson Library, Armagh, where many of his printed books also survive. His library was sequestered by the Long Parliament, but bought back by him in 1647; it descended through his daughter to the Marquis of Hastings and was eventually sold at auction in 1868.
Characteristic Markings
Conway's books are generally identified from the presence of one of three armorial stamps which he used, based on the family crest; his books at the Robinson Library are not usually otherwise marked or inscribed by him.
Sources
- British Armorial Bindings.
- Erne, L. Shakespeare and the book trade, 2013, 207-9.
- Knowles, James. '"Conway, Edward, second Viscount Conway and second Viscount Killultagh (bap. 1594, d. 1655), politician and book collector."' Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- Plomer, H. R. A cavalier’s library, The Library 2nd ser 5 (1904), 158-172.
- Purcell, M. The country house library. New Haven & London, 2017, 93.
- Roy, I. The libraries of Edward, 2nd Viscount Conway, and others, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 43 (1968), 35-46.
- Smith, D. ‘La conquest du sang real’: Edward, second Viscount Conway’s quest for books in J. Hinks and M. Day (eds), From compositors to collectors (2012), 199-216.