Difference between revisions of "William Dowsing 1596-1668"

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====Books====  
 
====Books====  
 
Dowsing had an appreciable personal library, of which ca.25 volumes are known today, including a set of 161 Civil War [[subject::theology|sermons]] bound in 6 volumes.  Known contents are largely [[subject::theology|theological]], [[subject::politics|political]], [[subject::history|historical]].  He bequeathed his books to his eldest [[beneficiary::son]], who sold them to a [[location::London]] [[occupation::bookseller]] in the 1690s, when the collection was dispersed.  Examples: British Library Ames I/595, II/590 (titlepages only); Aberystwyth University Library RBR* BS1305.R7 Qto (Rogers, ''Commentary'', 1615); Ipswich Town Library King 654/6E; Maggs 1272 (1999)/64.
 
Dowsing had an appreciable personal library, of which ca.25 volumes are known today, including a set of 161 Civil War [[subject::theology|sermons]] bound in 6 volumes.  Known contents are largely [[subject::theology|theological]], [[subject::politics|political]], [[subject::history|historical]].  He bequeathed his books to his eldest [[beneficiary::son]], who sold them to a [[location::London]] [[occupation::bookseller]] in the 1690s, when the collection was dispersed.  Examples: British Library Ames I/595, II/590 (titlepages only); Aberystwyth University Library RBR* BS1305.R7 Qto (Rogers, ''Commentary'', 1615); Ipswich Town Library King 654/6E; Maggs 1272 (1999)/64.
 
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[[file:P1280816(1).JPG|thumb|550px|Dowsing's inscription, from the titlepage of T. Clarke, ''The popes deadly wound'', 1623, British Library Ames 2/590]]
 
====Characteristic Markings====  
 
====Characteristic Markings====  
 
Dowsing regularly wrote his name on titlepages, together with a numerical code showing the date of acquisition and the date of reading, sometimes the price paid.  An extensive annotator, regularly noting biblical textual references and personal reactions to what he read.   
 
Dowsing regularly wrote his name on titlepages, together with a numerical code showing the date of acquisition and the date of reading, sometimes the price paid.  An extensive annotator, regularly noting biblical textual references and personal reactions to what he read.   
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*[https://www.ustc.ac.uk/news/william-dowsing-breaker-of-idols-and-marker-of-books Epstein, N., William Dowsing breaker of idols and marker of books].
 
*[https://www.ustc.ac.uk/news/william-dowsing-breaker-of-idols-and-marker-of-books Epstein, N., William Dowsing breaker of idols and marker of books].
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*Hines, Bill, "Bad hair day" at Bury Assizes - an iconoclast's tale, ''Library and Information History Group Newsletter'' Winter 2016, 4-6.
 
*Maggs (catalogues of the London booksellers Maggs bros) 1272 (1999)/64; 1324 (2002)/37.
 
*Maggs (catalogues of the London booksellers Maggs bros) 1272 (1999)/64; 1324 (2002)/37.
 
*Morrill, J. William Dowsing, the bureaucratic puritan in J. Morrill et al (eds), ''Public duty and private conscience in seventeenth-century England'', Oxford, 1993, 173-203.  
 
*Morrill, J. William Dowsing, the bureaucratic puritan in J. Morrill et al (eds), ''Public duty and private conscience in seventeenth-century England'', Oxford, 1993, 173-203.  

Latest revision as of 04:02, 26 June 2022

William DOWSING 1596-1668

Biographical Note

Born Laxfield, Suffolk, son of a farmer. Became a yeoman-farmer himself, first in Coddenham, subsequently in Stratford St Mary (both in Suffolk). He was “a godly middling-sort puritan: a man of comfortable means, uncertain social status [but] educated, well read” (Morrill). During 1643-44 he was appointed a parliamentary commissioner for removing monuments and images from churches in East Anglia; his detailed account of the work he carried out, which survives, has been much valued and analysed by historians.

Books

Dowsing had an appreciable personal library, of which ca.25 volumes are known today, including a set of 161 Civil War sermons bound in 6 volumes. Known contents are largely theological, political, historical. He bequeathed his books to his eldest son, who sold them to a London bookseller in the 1690s, when the collection was dispersed. Examples: British Library Ames I/595, II/590 (titlepages only); Aberystwyth University Library RBR* BS1305.R7 Qto (Rogers, Commentary, 1615); Ipswich Town Library King 654/6E; Maggs 1272 (1999)/64.

Dowsing's inscription, from the titlepage of T. Clarke, The popes deadly wound, 1623, British Library Ames 2/590

Characteristic Markings

Dowsing regularly wrote his name on titlepages, together with a numerical code showing the date of acquisition and the date of reading, sometimes the price paid. An extensive annotator, regularly noting biblical textual references and personal reactions to what he read.

Sources