Difference between revisions of "Ralph Bathurst 1620-1704"
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
====Biographical Note==== | ====Biographical Note==== | ||
− | Born at [[ | + | Born at [[lived at::Hothorpe, Northamptonshire]], son of [[son of::George Bathurst]]. [[Has degree::BA]] [[educated at::Trinity College, Oxford]] 1638, [[has profession::Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford|fellow]] 1640, [[has degree::MA]]1641. During the 1640s he abandoned formal university studies in favour of medicine – his family affairs were much disrupted by the Civil War – although he remained based at Trinity College and graduated [[has degree::MD]] in 1654. He was associated with the scientific circle in Oxford and was a founder member of the Royal Society as well as being made a [[has profession::Chaplain to Charles II]] in 1663. In 1664 he became [[has profession::President of Trinity College, Oxford|President of Trinity College]], where he subsequently dedicated much energy and fund-raising to renewing and expanding the College buildings, culminating in the new chapel built 1691-94. He also became [[has profession::Dean of Wells]] in 1670. |
====Books==== | ====Books==== | ||
− | Bathurst’s will shows that he had libraries both at Oxford and Wells, and he made detailed arrangements for their disposal. He bequeathed numerous specific books to relatives and friends, and directed the selection of books to particular monetary values to be given to Trinity College Library, to commoners and scholars of the College, to Wells Cathedral Library, and others. The residue of his books was to be divided between three nephews. He bequeathed his “writings and paper books” to his nephew [[is associated with::Richard Healy]], with the stipulation that they should not be made public, and “earnestly desire[d] that all the books and papers in the Fir Box with a lock and marked 1677 on the lid may be privately burned.” Ca 30 volumes of his can be identified at Wells today. Bathurst also gave books to Wells and Trinity during his lifetime, and also to the Bodleian (in 1657, he gave a copy of the Chronicles of England printed by Caxton in 1480). His bequests to the Bodleian comprised pictures and coins, but not books. Examples: Bodleian S.Seld.d.4; Christies 23.6.1977/325, 30.11.1977/496, 16.3.1978/1310. | + | Bathurst’s will shows that he had libraries both at Oxford and Wells, and he made detailed arrangements for their disposal. He bequeathed numerous specific books to relatives and friends, and directed the selection of books to particular monetary values to be given to Trinity College Library, to commoners and scholars of the College, to Wells Cathedral Library, and others. The residue of his books was to be divided between three nephews. He bequeathed his “writings and paper books” to his nephew [[is associated with::Richard Healy]], with the stipulation that they should not be made public, and “earnestly desire[d] that all the books and papers in the Fir Box with a lock and marked 1677 on the lid may be privately burned.” Ca 30 volumes of his can be identified at Wells today. Bathurst also gave books to Wells and Trinity during his lifetime, and also to the Bodleian (in 1657, he gave a copy of the Chronicles of England printed by Caxton in 1480). His bequests to the Bodleian comprised pictures and [[bequeathed::coins]], but not books. Examples: Bodleian S.Seld.d.4; Christies 23.6.1977/325, 30.11.1977/496, 16.3.1978/1310. |
====Sources==== | ====Sources==== | ||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society]] | [[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society]] | ||
[[Category:Royal Chaplains]] | [[Category:Royal Chaplains]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Numismatists]] | ||
[[Category:Libraries bequeathed to institutions]] | [[Category:Libraries bequeathed to institutions]] |
Revision as of 05:54, 7 October 2019
Ralph BATHURST 1620-1704
Biographical Note
Born at Hothorpe, Northamptonshire, son of George Bathurst. BA Trinity College, Oxford 1638, fellow 1640, MA1641. During the 1640s he abandoned formal university studies in favour of medicine – his family affairs were much disrupted by the Civil War – although he remained based at Trinity College and graduated MD in 1654. He was associated with the scientific circle in Oxford and was a founder member of the Royal Society as well as being made a Chaplain to Charles II in 1663. In 1664 he became President of Trinity College, where he subsequently dedicated much energy and fund-raising to renewing and expanding the College buildings, culminating in the new chapel built 1691-94. He also became Dean of Wells in 1670.
Books
Bathurst’s will shows that he had libraries both at Oxford and Wells, and he made detailed arrangements for their disposal. He bequeathed numerous specific books to relatives and friends, and directed the selection of books to particular monetary values to be given to Trinity College Library, to commoners and scholars of the College, to Wells Cathedral Library, and others. The residue of his books was to be divided between three nephews. He bequeathed his “writings and paper books” to his nephew Richard Healy, with the stipulation that they should not be made public, and “earnestly desire[d] that all the books and papers in the Fir Box with a lock and marked 1677 on the lid may be privately burned.” Ca 30 volumes of his can be identified at Wells today. Bathurst also gave books to Wells and Trinity during his lifetime, and also to the Bodleian (in 1657, he gave a copy of the Chronicles of England printed by Caxton in 1480). His bequests to the Bodleian comprised pictures and coins, but not books. Examples: Bodleian S.Seld.d.4; Christies 23.6.1977/325, 30.11.1977/496, 16.3.1978/1310.
Sources
Steggle, Matthew. "Bathurst, Ralph (1619/20–1704), dean of Wells and college head." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/1699. C. Church, ‘Notes on the … Library of the Dean and Chapter … of Wells’, Archaeologia 57 (1901), 201-228; Macray; C. Hopkins, Trinity: 450 years of an Oxford college, 2005.