Difference between revisions of "Scipio Le Squyer 1597-1659"

From Book Owners Online
Line 6: Line 6:
  
 
====Books====   
 
====Books====   
A catalogue of his library made in 1632 shows a collection of ca.500 [[format::printed]] books and 296 [[format::manuscript|manuscripts]], divided into various subject headings; the [[format::printed]] books included [[subject::theology]] (131 vols), [[subject::history]] (131), [[subject::poesy]] (83), [[subject::morality]] (46), [[subject::law]] (32), [[subject::lexicography|dictionaries]] and [[subject::grammar|grammars]] (27), [[subject::medicine]] (13), [[subject::herbals]] (8).  They included a small section of “books that my dead wife left” (9 vols, all [[language::English]] [[subject::theology|devotional]] works). Examples: BL ms Cotton Vit.D.ix; Manchester UL ms Lat.224; Yale UL Eliz 188; Christopher Edwards 39 (2008)/9.
+
A catalogue of his library made in 1632 shows a collection of ca.500 [[format::printed]] books and 296 [[format::manuscript|manuscripts]], divided into various subject headings; the [[format::printed]] books included [[subject::theology]] (131 vols), [[subject::history]] (131), [[subject::poesy]] (83), [[subject::morality]] (46), [[subject::law]] (32), [[subject::lexicography|dictionaries]] and [[subject::grammar|grammars]] (27), [[subject::medicine]] (13), [[subject::herbals]] (8).  They included a small section of “books that my dead wife left” (9 vols, all [[language::English]] [[subject::theology|devotional]] works). Examples: British Library ms Cotton Vit.D.ix; Manchester UL ms Lat.224; Yale UL Eliz 188; Christopher Edwards 39 (2008)/9.
  
 
====Sources====
 
====Sources====

Revision as of 22:52, 23 July 2020

Scipio LE SQUYER 1597-1659

Biographical Note

Born (probably) in Devon, son of Edmund Le Squyer, Rector of King’s Nympton, Devon. Studied at New Inn Hall 1599-1603; admitted at Gray’s Inn 1627. Marshal to John Doddrige of Devon, 1603-28; Deputy Chamberlain in the receipt of the Exchequer, 1620; Chamberlain of the Exchequer , and Keeper of the Records, 1655. Acting Escheator of Devon and Cornwall, 1643. Granted £10 in 1627 for his “extraordinary service” in sorting the Treasury records. A member of the informal circle of London antiquaries of the early 17th century, and a friend of (e.g.) Robert Cotton, William Dugdale and Simon d’Ewes. Much of his professional activity was directed towards preparing calendars and other finding aids for the public records.

Books

A catalogue of his library made in 1632 shows a collection of ca.500 printed books and 296 manuscripts, divided into various subject headings; the printed books included theology (131 vols), history (131), poesy (83), morality (46), law (32), dictionaries and grammars (27), medicine (13), herbals (8). They included a small section of “books that my dead wife left” (9 vols, all English devotional works). Examples: British Library ms Cotton Vit.D.ix; Manchester UL ms Lat.224; Yale UL Eliz 188; Christopher Edwards 39 (2008)/9.

Sources

  • Birrell, T. Reading as pastime: the place of light literature in some 17th-century gentlemen’s libraries, in R. Myers (ed), Property of a gentleman, Winchester, 1991, 113-131, 119-21.
  • Ovenden, R. Scipio le Squyer and the fate of monastic cartularies, The Library 6th ser 13 (1991), 323-37.
  • Ramsay, Nigel. "Le Squyer, Scipio (1579–1659), record keeper and antiquary." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
  • Taylor, F. The books and manuscripts of Scipio Le Squyer, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 25 (1941), 137-64.