Difference between revisions of "Thomas Samwell 1687-1757"

From Book Owners Online
(Created page with "__NOTITLE__ ===Sir name::Thomas name::SAMWELL 2nd bt. date of birth::1687-date of death::1757=== ====Biographical Note==== Son of Sir family::Thomas Samw...")
 
m
 
Line 7: Line 7:
 
Son of Sir [[family::Thomas Samwell 1st bt]] of [[location::Upton, Northamptonshire]] and [[family:: Mary Godschalk]]; succeeded as 2nd bt in 1694. Matriculated at [[education::Corpus Christi College, Cambridge]] in 1703.  MP for [[location::Coventry, Warwickshire|Coventry]] 1715-22.   
 
Son of Sir [[family::Thomas Samwell 1st bt]] of [[location::Upton, Northamptonshire]] and [[family:: Mary Godschalk]]; succeeded as 2nd bt in 1694. Matriculated at [[education::Corpus Christi College, Cambridge]] in 1703.  MP for [[location::Coventry, Warwickshire|Coventry]] 1715-22.   
  
Samwell’s cultural and artistic life is probably of more interest than his political and landowning  one: from 1707 he undertook a lengthy and extensive Grand Tour of five countries, was the dedicatee of [[associates::Robert Valentin|Robert Valentine/Follintine]]’s ''Sonate de flauto '' ca.1708, and engaged the great stuccoist [[associates::Guiseppe Artari]] at Upton House. The latter has been described as a ‘locus classicus’ for the French painter [[associates::Philip Mercier]], with Samwell  featuring in his famous ‘bacchanialian’ group scene ca.1733 (now in the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, Fredericton, Canada).  He was President in 1746 of the [[organisations::Northampton Philosophic Society]]. He married 1. [[family::Millicent Samwell|Millicent Fuller]]; 2. [[family::Mary Samwell|Mary Ives (née Clark)]].  
+
Samwell’s cultural and artistic life is probably of more interest than his political and landowning  one: from 1707 he undertook a lengthy and extensive Grand Tour of five countries, was the dedicatee of [[associates::Robert Valentin|Robert Valentine/Follintine]]’s ''Sonate de flauto '' ca.1708, and engaged the great stuccoist [[associates::Guiseppe Artari]] at Upton House. The latter has been described as a ‘locus classicus’ for the painter [[associates::Philippe Mercier]], with Samwell  featuring in his famous ‘bacchanialian’ group scene ca.1733 (now in the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, Fredericton, Canada).  He was President in 1746 of the [[organisations::Northampton Philosophic Society]]. He married 1. [[family::Millicent Samwell|Millicent Fuller]]; 2. [[family::Mary Samwell|Mary Ives (née Clark)]].  
  
 
====Books====
 
====Books====

Latest revision as of 10:29, 6 May 2021


Sir Thomas SAMWELL 2nd bt. 1687-1757

Biographical Note

Son of Sir Thomas Samwell 1st bt of Upton, Northamptonshire and Mary Godschalk; succeeded as 2nd bt in 1694. Matriculated at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge in 1703. MP for Coventry 1715-22.

Samwell’s cultural and artistic life is probably of more interest than his political and landowning one: from 1707 he undertook a lengthy and extensive Grand Tour of five countries, was the dedicatee of Robert Valentine/Follintine’s Sonate de flauto ca.1708, and engaged the great stuccoist Guiseppe Artari at Upton House. The latter has been described as a ‘locus classicus’ for the painter Philippe Mercier, with Samwell featuring in his famous ‘bacchanialian’ group scene ca.1733 (now in the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, Fredericton, Canada). He was President in 1746 of the Northampton Philosophic Society. He married 1. Millicent Fuller; 2. Mary Ives (née Clark).

Books

The nature and the extent of his library have not been established. (The Upton house and estates passed out of the Samwell family's hands in 1860.)

Characteristic Markings

He had an engraved armorial bookplate: Franks 26036.

Sources

  • Gambier Howe, E. R. J. Franks bequest: catalogue of British and American book plates bequeathed to the ... British Museum. London, 1903-4.
  • History of Parliament.
  • Kerslake, J. ‘Mercier at Upton’. The Burlington Magazine, 118 (1976), 770-3.
  • Page, C. The guitar in Stuart England. Cambridge, 2017, pp. 200-1.
  • Shearing, D. K. ‘Education in the Peterborough diocese in the century following the “glorious revolution”’. PhD dissertation. Institute of Education, University of London, 1990, p. 200.