Difference between revisions of "Scroop Egerton 1681-1745"
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− | Bridgewater Library books can sometimes be recognised from their distinctive early pressmarks. Egerton also used a bookplate dated 1703 [Franks 9642]. | + | Bridgewater Library books can sometimes be recognised from their distinctive early pressmarks. Egerton also seems to have used a bookplate dated 1703 [Franks 9642]. |
====Sources==== | ====Sources==== |
Revision as of 08:26, 6 December 2022
Scroop EGERTON, 1st Duke of Bridgewater 1681-1745
Biographical Note
Son of John Egerton, 3rd Earl of Bridgewater, from whom he inherited the title and estates in 1701. He held several offices at court and was created 1st Duke of Bridgewater in 1720.
Books
Egerton inherited the library which had been built up since the time of his great-great-grandfather Thomas Egerton, and added to it himself; it became known as the Bridgewater Library. It has thought that Scroop made few additions to the library himself, it having been developed during the preceding generations and left relatively dormant during the eighteenth century, but it should be noted that Scroop commissioned and used a bookplate, dated 1703 (Franks 9643/*34), and that the catalogue of the library compiled at the beginning of the 20th century (British Library LR274.b.1) contains many early eighteenth-century imprints which seem likely to date from the 4th Earl's/1st Duke's time. The Bridgewater Library began to be dispersed in the 19th century and a significant portion of it (ca.4400 volumes) was purchased by Henry Huntington in 1917, and is now in the Huntington Library in California.
Characteristic Markings
Bridgewater Library books can sometimes be recognised from their distinctive early pressmarks. Egerton also seems to have used a bookplate dated 1703 [Franks 9642].
Sources
- Erne, L., Shakespeare and the book trade, 2013, 202-6.
- Gambier Howe, E. R. J. Franks bequest: catalogue of British and American book plates bequeathed to the ... British Museum. London, 1903-4.
- Hackel, H., Reading material in early modern England, Cambridge, 2005, 240-81.
- Mendle, M., Preserving the ephemeral in J. Andersen (ed), Books and readers in early modern England, Philadelphia, 2002, 201-16
- Pargeter, S. A catalogue of the library at Tatton Park, 1977.
- Tabor, S., The Bridgewater Library in W. Baker (ed), Pre-19th century British book collectors, Detroit, 1999, 40-50.
- West, S., An architectural typology for the early modern country house library, 1660-1720, The Library 7th ser 14 (2013), 441-464, p.460.