Difference between revisions of "Anne Sadleir 1585-1672"
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− | Known to have been an owner of books as well as coins and curiosities. [[bequest::Gave]] [[Format::manuscript|manuscripts]] including [[subject::commonplace books]], letters and the [[Book Title::Trinity Apocalypse]] to [[ | + | Known to have been an owner of books as well as coins and curiosities. [[bequest::Gave]] [[Format::manuscript|manuscripts]] including [[subject::commonplace books]], letters and the [[Book Title::Trinity Apocalypse]] to [[beneficiary::Trinity College, Cambridge]] in [[Date of bequest::1649]] and [[Date of bequest::1664]]. One of her commonplace books at [[Organisations::Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity]] includes an account written by Anne of the life of her cousin, [[family::Elizabeth, Lady Capel]]: a rare example of a female-authored account of another seventeenth-century woman’s life. She [[bequest::bequeathed]] [[Format::manuscript|manuscripts]] and portraits to the [[beneficiary::Inner Temple]] in [[Date of bequest::1661]], including a [[subject::sermon]] dedicated to her by [[Associates::Andrew Marvell]]. |
====Sources==== | ====Sources==== |
Revision as of 08:19, 23 April 2020
Anne SADLEIR 1585-1672
Biographical Note
Born at Huntingfield Manor, Suffolk, daughter of Sir Edward Coke (1552-1634). Lived at Standon Lordship in Hertfordshire following her marriage to Ralph Sadleir. A literary patron and supporter of the Church of England, she continued to use the Book of Common Prayer despite its proscription and corresponded with leading Anglican divines, including the puritan minister Roger Williams.
Books
Known to have been an owner of books as well as coins and curiosities. Gave manuscripts including commonplace books, letters and the Trinity Apocalypse to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1649 and 1664. One of her commonplace books at Trinity includes an account written by Anne of the life of her cousin, Elizabeth, Lady Capel: a rare example of a female-authored account of another seventeenth-century woman’s life. She bequeathed manuscripts and portraits to the Inner Temple in 1661, including a sermon dedicated to her by Andrew Marvell.
Sources
- Commonplace Books and the Apocalypse: Anne Sadleir’s Manuscripts at Trinity.
- Burke, Victoria E. "Sadleir [née Coke], Anne (1585–1671/2), literary patron." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- Hunt, A. The books, manuscripts and literary patronage of Mrs Anne Sadleir, Early modern women's manuscript writing, ed V. Burke and J. Gibson, 2004, 205-228.
- West, S. An architectural typology for the early modern country house library, 1660-1720, The Library 7th ser 14 (2013), 441-464, p.461.