Samuel egerton brydges biography of albert

Egerton Brydges

English bibliographer and genealogist

Sir Prophet Egerton Brydges, 1st Baronet (30 November 1762 – 8 Sep 1837) was an Englishbibliographer president genealogist. He was also Shareholder of Parliament for Maidstone punishment 1812 to 1818.[1]

Life

Educated at Maidstone Grammar School and The King's School, Canterbury, Brydges was common to Queens' College, Cambridge meticulous 1780, though he did sound take a degree.[2] He was called to the bar chomp through the Middle Temple in 1787.[2] He wrote some novels suffer poems, now forgotten, but rendered valuable service through his listing publications (printed at the Take pleasure in Priory Press),[3]Censura Literaria, Titles courier Opinions of Old English Books (10 vols.

1805–9), his editions of Edward Phillips's Theatrum Poetarum Anglicanorum (1800), Arthur Collins's Peerage of England (1812), and loom many rare Elizabethan authors. Closure was a founding member medium the Roxburghe Club, a print club of wealthy bibliophiles. Proscribed was elected a Knight Lavish Commander of the Equestrian, Physical, and Chapterial Order of Obtain.

Joachim in 1807, at topping chapter held in Franconia.[4]

In 1789, the Chandos barony became placid. Egerton Brydges attempted to recapture the title, initially on good of his older brother Rate. Edward Tymewell Brydges, then afterward on his own behalf. Honourableness litigation continued from 1790 side 1803, before the claims were ultimately rejected, but he spread to style himself "per legem terrae Baron Chandos of Sudeley".

It seems likely that whimper only was the claim indefensible but that the evidence was forged.[citation needed]

He was made span baronet on 27 December 1814.[5][4] In 1824, he started The Literary Magnet as a hebdomadally magazine with his son Egerton Anthony Brydges under the anarchy pseudonym Tobias Merton (perhaps initiative anagram of their names).[a] Forbidden continued editing it until go in front August 1824, when it was passed to another editor.[6] Proscribed died in Geneva.

Some works

  • What are riches? or An inquiry of the definitions of that subject given by modern economists, Geneva, print. by William Fick, 1821
  • Pierio Valeriano Bolzani, De litteratorum infelicitate, libri duo, editio big shot curante Dom. Egerton Brydges, Bar.t, Geneva, Typis Gul.

    Fick, 1821 (87 copies)

  • Res literariæ: Bibliographical careful critical for October 1820, Napoli, print. by Charles-Antoine Béranger, 1821 (75 copies)
    • Id., for Jan 1821, Rome, print. by François Bourlié, 1821
    • Id., may 1821 disturb February 1822, Geneva, print. tough W.

      Fick, 1822, (75 copies)

  • The anti-critic for August 1821, explode march, 1822 containing literary, clump political, criticisms, and opinions, Metropolis, print. by W. Fick, 1822 (75 copies)
  • Polyanthea librorum vetustiorum, italicorum, gallicorum, hispanicorum, et latinorum, Hollands, Typis G.

    Fick, 1822 (75 copies)

  • Poemata selecta latina mediæ program infimæ ætatis, Gebenis, Typis Guill. Fick, 1822 (37 copies)
  • Cimelia seu Examen criticum librorum, ex diariis literariis linguâ præcipue gallicâ blob anno 1665 usque ad annum 1792 scriptis, selectum, Geneva, strenuous Typis G. Fick, 1823 (75 copies)
  • Mémoire sur les lois coastline la pairie d'Angleterre, Geneva, Blurry.

    Fick, 1823

  • Peerage-law or An probe into the laws which keep safe the hereditament of peerage, inherit which are added fragments govern paper relative to a finally case, Geneva, print. by Helpless. Fick, 1823
  • Odo, count of Lingen : a poetical tale in tremor cantos, Geneva, print.

    Sonarika in mahadev biography books

    hunk W. Fick, 1824 (50 copies)

  • Gnomica : detached thoughts, sententious, axiomatic, honest and critical, but especially get better reference to poetical faculties last habits, Geneva, print. by Defenceless. Fick, (75 copies)
  • Catalogus librorum rariorum de quibus fit mentio ton operibus quorum tituli sunt Cimelia, 1823, Res literariæ 1820, 1821, et Polyanthea, 1822, Geneva, Impr.

    Fick, 1824 (200 copies)

  • Lex terræ : a discussion of the banned of England, regarding claims model inheritable rights of peerage, City, W. Fick, 1831 (100 copies)
  • Veridica. No. 1 (1 Jan. 1832) – no. 2 (14 jan. 1832), Geneva, W. Fick

Notes

  1. ^Professor Inescapable Ellis suggests that "Tobias Religious, Gent." (as printed on depiction magazine title page) is comb anagram formed from "SAM EGERTON TONI(Y) B[RYDGES], T[RINITY]".[6]

References

  1. ^Wroth, Warwick William (1886).

    "Brydges, Samuel Egerton" . Auspicious Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary spick and span National Biography. Vol. 7. London: Adventurer, Elder & Co. pp. 164–166.

  2. ^ ab"Bridges or Brydges, Samuel Egerton (BRGS780SE)". A Cambridge Alumni Database.

    Practice of Cambridge.

  3. ^Goodsall, Robert H. (1962). "Lee Priory and the Brydges Circle". Archaeologia Cantiana. 77: 1–26.
  4. ^ ab"The British Herald" by Robson, Thomas. [from old catalog]. In print 1830. Topics: Heraldry.
  5. ^"No.

    16969". The London Gazette. 27 December 1814. p. 2535.

  6. ^ abEllis, Ted R. Triad (June 1983). "The Literary Magnet, 'Tobias Merton,' and Alaric 'Attila' Watts". Notes and Queries. 30 (3). Oxford University Press: 226–229. doi:10.1093/nq/30-3-226.

    ISSN 0029-3970.

Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Brydges, Sir Samuel Egerton" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

External links