Difference between revisions of "Godfrey Clarke 1559/60?-1634"

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====Biographical Note====
 
====Biographical Note====
The Clarkes were a gentry family based at [[location::Somsersall Hall]], near [[location::Chesterfield, Derbyshire]]; the estate was acquired during the 16th century.  The male heirs typically went through [[education::University of Oxford|Oxford]] without taking a degree, before going on to study law at one of the [[organisations::Inns of Court]], but Godfrey is not recorded in the university lists. Father of [[family::Gilbert Clarke 1592/3-1650|Gilbert Clarke]] ([[date of birth::1592;1593|1592/3]]-[[date of death::1650]]).  
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The Clarkes were a gentry family based at [[location::Somsersall Hall]], near [[location::Chesterfield, Derbyshire]]; the estate was acquired during the 16th century.  The male heirs typically went through [[education::University of Oxford|Oxford]] without taking a degree, before going on to study law at one of the Inns of Court , but Godfrey is not recorded in the university lists. Father of [[family::Gilbert Clarke 1592/3-1650|Gilbert Clarke]] ([[date of birth::1592;1593|1592/3]]-[[date of death::1650]]).  
  
 
====Books====  
 
====Books====  

Revision as of 03:49, 5 August 2020

Godfrey CLARKE 1559/60?-1634

Biographical Note

The Clarkes were a gentry family based at Somsersall Hall, near Chesterfield, Derbyshire; the estate was acquired during the 16th century. The male heirs typically went through Oxford without taking a degree, before going on to study law at one of the Inns of Court , but Godfrey is not recorded in the university lists. Father of Gilbert Clarke (1592/3-1650).

Books

The growth of a family library and its passage down the generations can be seen in probate documents. Godfrey had books valued at £6 13s 4d in “a room called the studie”, while the probate inventory of his son Gilbert (d.1650) shows books held in several places in the house, valued at £10 11s. Gilbert’s son Godfrey (d.1670) left a library in the study valued at £30, together with “certain old law books and other books in the closet in the dining room” valued at £3 6s 8d; his inventory also refers to “a frame for books with curtains”.

Characteristic Markings

None of the family’s books have been identified.

Sources

  • Hoare, P. (gen.ed.), The Cambridge history of libraries in Britain and Ireland. 3 vols. Cambridge, 2006, II 176;
  • Henning, B. The House of Commons 1660-1690, London, 1983. 1660-1690.
  • Milward, R. ‘Books and booksellers in late 17th century Chesterfield’, Derbyshire Miscellany 10 (1985), 119-45, p.129.