Descripción
Shropshire Combermere Abbey Whitchurch - COLOR PRINT fine art print " FO Morris antique prints colored engravings circa 1870s ANTIQUE COLOR PRINT Title: COMBERMERE ABBEY Approximate Image Size: 5 X 7 1/2 inches Approximate Overall Size: 8 X 10 1/2 inches Brilliant color print. Printed and engraved by by B. Fawcett, Driffield. This beautiful attractive colour plate originates from and is one of a Series of Picturesque Views of Seats of The Noblemen and Gentlemen of Great Britian and Ireland as presented by F. O. Morris. A greater proportion of the drawings which originated from the publication were by Alexander F. Lydon, and printed from coloured wood-blocks using the Baxter process by Benjamin Fawcett. Published by William Mackenzie, Ludgate Hill, Edinburgh and Dublin CONDITION: Excellent Condition. The colors are brilliant, rich and bright. Reverse side is blank and printed on heavier quality paper. From the old descriptive: COMBERMERE ABBEY NEAR WHITCHURCH, SHROPSHIRE.-VISCOUNT COMBERMERE. Here was originally, as is conveyed by the name, an Abbey of Benedictine Monks, founded by one Hugh de Malbank in -the year 1133. When the dissolution of the monasteries took place, in the reign of King Henry the Eighth, that monarch bestowed the lands on George Cotton, who derived his family name from Cotton, or Coton, in the county of Salop, where they had been settled before the Norman Conquest, or from a village of that name in Cheshire. He was Esquire of the Body,to His Majesty, Privy Councillor and Vice Chamberlain to Prince Edward. Thereupon the family quitted their residence in Shropshire for that which has since been their head-quarters in the county of Cheshire.The mansion stands on the bank of a lake or mere, from which it derives its name, and occupies the site of the old monastery, of which some remains are still in existence. The library, has been adapted from the refectory, which in its original state was Sixty feet long and twenty-eight feet high. The ancient oak roof is still preserved, and is richly ornamented with the carvings which were customary at that day. Upon the walls are the quarterings of the Cotton family from the time of King John, as also those of Salusbury, of Llewenny, now represented by Lord Combermere. In the library there is a collection of valuable paintings, and many portraits of the Cottons. The house is situated in the midst of a fine park. The Duke of Wellington planted in it the "Wellington Oak" when on a visit to his old companion in arms, Lord Combermere. The family of Lord Combermere derives from Sir George Cotton, living in the reign of King Henry the Eighth, whose descendants were as follows:- RICHARD COTTON, ESQ. GEORGE COTTON, ESQ. THOMAS COTTON, ESQ. SIR ROBERT COTTON, BARONET. SIR THOMAS COTTON, BARONET. SIR. ROBERT SALUSBURY COTTON BARONET, M.P. SIR LYNCH SALUSBURY COTTON, BARONET. SIR ROBERT SALUSBURY COTTON, BARONET, M.P. SIR. STAPLETON COTTON, BARONET, G.C.B., G.O.H., G.T.S., K.S.F., K.S.l., who for his eminent military services in Spain and India was raised to the peerage as BAPRON, and afterward VISCOUNT COMBERMARE. SIR. WELLINGTON HENRY STAPLETON COTTON, Second LORD COMBERMERE. Of this family was also that most truly excellent man, the Rev. Richard Lynch Cotton, D.D., successively Fellow, Tutor, and Provost of Worcester College, Oxford, within whose "classic shades" the,writer of these pages received his university education. A copy of the circa 1870s full descriptive, which covers some wonderful landscape history of COMBERMERE ABBEY and some genealogy information will be We do have more than 1 in stock of some of these so the image shown may be a stock photo, so please do contact us with any concerns about condition. We will also let you know if there's any major defect before shipping. ALSO AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD AT HIGH DPI RESOLUTION, PLEASE EMAIL FOR INFO. . N° de ref. del artículo 6059
Contactar al vendedor
Denunciar este artículo