Difference between revisions of "Richard Lucy ca.1619-1677"

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===[[name::Richard]] [[name::LUCY]] ca.[[date of Birth::1619]]-[[date of Death::1677|77]]===
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===[[name::Richard]] [[name::LUCY]] ca.[[date of birth::1619]]-[[date of death::1677]]===
  
 
====Biographical Note====
 
====Biographical Note====
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====Books====
 
====Books====
[[family::Alice Lucy]] and her husband [[family::Sir Thomas Lucy]] are both known to have been active book-lovers who established a significant library, which is featured on Thomas’s funeral monument.  It was further developed by later family members, including [[family::Richard Lucy|Richard]].  Some books from the 17th-century period survive at [[present Repository::Charlecote Park]] today, interspersed among later acquisitions, although much of the original has been lost.
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[[family::Alice Lucy]] and her husband [[family::Sir Thomas Lucy]] are both known to have been active book-lovers who established a significant library, which is featured on Thomas’s funeral monument.  It was further developed by later family members, including [[family::Richard Lucy|Richard]].  Some books from the 17th-century period survive at [[present repository::Charlecote Park]] today, interspersed among later acquisitions, although much of the original has been lost.
  
 
====Sources====
 
====Sources====
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[[Category:Gentry]]
 
[[Category:Members of Parliament]]
 
[[Category:Members of Parliament]]
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[[Category:All Owners]]

Latest revision as of 09:28, 27 March 2022

Richard LUCY ca.1619-1677

Biographical Note

Of Charlecote Park, Warwickshire, the Lucy family were landowners, MPs and administrators, noted also as patrons of the arts, antiquaries, and scholars.

Books

Alice Lucy and her husband Sir Thomas Lucy are both known to have been active book-lovers who established a significant library, which is featured on Thomas’s funeral monument. It was further developed by later family members, including Richard. Some books from the 17th-century period survive at Charlecote Park today, interspersed among later acquisitions, although much of the original has been lost.

Sources

  • Cliffe, J. The world of the country house in seventeenth-century England, 1999, 166.
  • Purcell, M. The country house library. New Haven & London, 2017, 68-70.