Difference between revisions of "John Isham 1582-1651"

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====Books====
 
====Books====
The Isham family library at Lamport Hall was developed over many generations, beginning around the turn of the 17th century, until its dispersal from the 19th century onwards (although many books still remain at Lamport today). We do not have much information about Sir John's books specifically, but book lists for his wife ([[crossreference::Judith Isham|Judith]]) and daughters [[crossreference::Elizabeth Isham|Elizabeth]] and [[crossreference::Judith Isham 1610-36|Judith]] survive. The library continued to be developed by John's son [[crossreference::Sir Justinian Isham|Justinian].  
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The Isham family library at Lamport Hall was developed over many generations, beginning around the turn of the 17th century, until its dispersal from the 19th century onwards (although many books still remain at Lamport today). We do not have much information about Sir John's books specifically, but book lists for his wife ([[crossreference::Judith Isham|Judith]]) and daughters [[crossreference::Elizabeth Isham|Elizabeth]] and [[crossreference::Judith Isham 1610-36|Judith]] survive. The library continued to be developed by John's son [[crossreference::Sir Justinian Isham|Justinian]].
  
 
====Sources====
 
====Sources====

Revision as of 00:10, 13 July 2020

Sir John ISHAM, 1st bart 1582-1651

Biographical Note

Son of Thomas Isham, of Lamport Hall, Northamptonshire, from whom he inherited the estate in 1605. He was knighted in 1608, High Sheriff of Northamptonshire in 1611, and made a baronet in 1627.

Books

The Isham family library at Lamport Hall was developed over many generations, beginning around the turn of the 17th century, until its dispersal from the 19th century onwards (although many books still remain at Lamport today). We do not have much information about Sir John's books specifically, but book lists for his wife (Judith) and daughters Elizabeth and Judith survive. The library continued to be developed by John's son Justinian.

Sources

  • Sir John Isham, Wikipedia.
  • Black, J. L. & others, Judith Isham, Judith Isham, Elizabeth Isham, Private Libraries in Renaissance England 9 (2017), 179-189, 201-208, 319-345.
  • Cambers, A. Godly reading, 2011, p.47, 65.
  • Graves, R. The Isham books, Bibliographica 3 (1897), 418-29.
  • Jackson, W. A. The Lamport Hall – Britwell Court books, in his Records of a bibliographer (1967), 121-133.
  • Hallam, H. Lamport Hall revisited, The Book Collector 16 (1967) 439-49.
  • Snook, E. Elizabeth Isham’s “own bookes”, in L. Knight et al (eds), Women’s bookscapes in early modern Britain, Ann Arbor, 2018, 77-93.
  • The diary of Thomas Isham of Lamport (1658-81), 1971.