Difference between revisions of "Nathaniel Coga 1637?-1693"
m (Text replacement - "date of Publication" to "date of publication") |
m (Text replacement - "date of Birth" to "date of birth") |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
__NOTITLE__ | __NOTITLE__ | ||
− | ===[[name::Nathaniel]] [[name::COGA]] [[date of | + | ===[[name::Nathaniel]] [[name::COGA]] [[date of birth::1637]]?-[[date of Death::1693]]=== |
====Biographical Note==== | ====Biographical Note==== |
Revision as of 07:15, 22 May 2020
Nathaniel COGA 1637?-1693
Biographical Note
Born at Veryan, Cornwall. BA Pembroke College, Cambridge 1657, MA 1660, DD 1678; Fellow of the College 1658, elected Master 1677. Vice-Chancellor of the [[education::the University of Cambridge|University, 1681. occupation::Vicar of Barton, Cambridgeshire 1662, of Vicar of Swaffham Bulbeck 1663; Rector of Framlingham, Suffolk 1678, of Rector of Feltwell, Norfolk 1664. Chaplain to Matthew Wren, Bishop of Ely (d.1667). Pembroke College library was redeveloped during his Mastership, by converting the old chapel; the work was paid for primarily by private subscription.
Books
Coga’s “entire library” was sold by auction by Edward Millington in Cambridge, 27 November 1694. The catalogue refers to the addition of a number of other books to the sale, which can be assumed to be a discrete appendix to the main section listing Coga’s books. This contains 1554 items, predominantly 17th century"17th century" contains a sequence that could not be interpreted against an available match matrix for date components. books, and mostly from the second half of the century. The lots are divided between Latin theology (374), Latin miscellaneous, including geography, history, lexicography and numismatics (the categories mentioned in the catalogue) (796), English divinity (200) and English miscellaneous (184).
Characteristic Markings
None of Coga's books have been identified.
Sources
- Bibliotheca Cogiana, 1694.
- Attwater, A. A short history of Pembroke College Cambridge, 1936.
- Pearson, D. Patterns of book ownership in late seventeenth-century England, The Library 7th ser 11 (2010), 139-167.
- Venn, J. Biographical history of Gonville & Caius College. Cambridge, 1897.