Difference between revisions of "Nathaniel Brown d.1701?"

From Book Owners Online
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====Books====  
 
====Books====  
Brown's library was [[auction::auctioned]] in [[location::London]], beginning [[date of auction:18 February 1702]].  No catalogues survive, but the sale was advertised in the ''English Post'' as "consisting of the most valuable and scarce books in the [[subject::law, common|common]] and [[subject::law, statute|statute]] [[subject::law]]".
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Brown's library was [[auction::auctioned]] in [[location::London]], beginning 18.2.1702.  No catalogues survive, but the sale was advertised in the ''English Post'' as "consisting of the most valuable and scarce books in the [[subject::law, common|common]] and [[subject::law, statute|statute]] [[subject::law]]".
  
 
====Characteristic Markings====  
 
====Characteristic Markings====  
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[[Category:Judges and Lawyers]]
 
[[Category:Judges and Lawyers]]
 
[[Category:Libraries Sold at Auction]]
 
[[Category:Libraries Sold at Auction]]
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[[Category:All Owners]]

Revision as of 07:50, 27 July 2020

Nathaniel BROWN -1701?

Biographical Note

Barrister ("counsellor at law"), of Worcester, apparently the son of Arthur Brown, also a Worcester lawyer, and presumably the man of this name who matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford 1650 (but appears not to have graduated), and is recorded as a barrister at the Middle Temple in 1672.

Books

Brown's library was auctioned in London, beginning 18.2.1702. No catalogues survive, but the sale was advertised in the English Post as "consisting of the most valuable and scarce books in the common and statute law".

Characteristic Markings

None of Brown's books have been identified.

Sources

  • Alston, R. C. Inventory of sale catalogues 1676-1800. St Philip, 2010.
  • Foster, J. Alumni Oxonienses. London, 1888.