Eponymologium Criticum ex Principum Sacrorum, secularium.
Creator
Date
1644
Identifier
Shoults Gb 1644 M
Type
Publisher
J. Pressius
Abstract
The simple bookplate with festoon (a wreath or garland hanging from two points) and legend (name) belongs to Charles Burney (1757–1817), the classicist, and son of Dr Charles Burney (1726–1814), the music historian. In 1777, while at Cambridge, young Burney stole 35 classical books, removing the University Library ownership details and replacing them with his own. He then sold the books in London as his own. He was dismissed, and sent to King’s College, Aberdeen, where he pursued classical studies, for which he later gained fame. Burney amassed a huge private library that the British Museum purchased in 1818. Somewhat fortunately, this Shoults book is not on the ‘missing’ list printed in Ralph Walker and J. C. T. Oates’s paper in the Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 1962.
Files
Citation
Tobias Magirus, “Eponymologium Criticum ex Principum Sacrorum, secularium.,” ourheritage.ac.nz | OUR Heritage, accessed November 25, 2024, https://otago.ourheritage.ac.nz/index.php/items/show/11498.