1801 Gentleman\'s Magazine Jan-Dec Illustrated History Foreign Affairs Domestic


1801 Gentleman\'s Magazine Jan-Dec Illustrated History Foreign Affairs Domestic

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1801 Gentleman\'s Magazine Jan-Dec Illustrated History Foreign Affairs Domestic :
$139.98


1801 Gentleman\'s Magazine Jan-Dec Illustrated History Foreign Affairs Domestic


Up forsale is the bound volume of:
The Gentleman\'s Magazine, and Historical Chronicle. For the COMPLETE Year MDCCCI [1801]. VolumeLXXI [71]
Part The First and Part The Second.
It includes all12monthly issues(Jan-Dec)and supplement.
Published in London, by Sylvanus Urban. Printed by Nichols and Son. The volume includeseach individual issue\'s illustrated title pagesand contentsas well aslots of greatearly engraved plates. 1217 pages of stories and history plus indexes.
Reviews, letters, Foreign Affairs & Domestic Occurrences, Births, Marriages & Deaths, etc

All plates called for are present.

Properly discarded ex-library copy with the usual library markings (occasional embossed stamps throughout / library pocket in the back cover, label on volume title, spine markings).BINDING COPY, with perished leather spine. Covers detached. Broken binding. Badly taped marbled endpapers, old institutional bookplates, occasional taping internally in the volume (not frequent but when done, done with library spine tape). Occasional spotting/foxing, but generally bright and readable. May have occasional pencil underlining.

All plates called for are present andinclude:
Vol LXXI PART I 1801
Plate 1. (foxing) Page. 9
Fig 1 View of the Church of Kirkby on the Bain, Lincolnshire. N.B.
Inscribed by mistake Kirby on the Blean
Fig 2 View of the Church of Flint. F. Cary sc.
Plate 2. (foxing) Page. 25
Fig 1, 2, 3 Ornament of silver gilt with the figure of a toad, and an
inscription, \"Rosen Negell Schlag.\"
Fig 4, 5 Armorial Bearings on a window at Salisbury, Wilts, viz. 4 is
for James Montagu, Bishop of Salisbury; 5 is a Merchant\'s mark
Fig 6 Ancient Seal of a Foreign Bishop, inscribed, \"S\'c i Hilarii d\' ive
matatgio.\" - 135
Fig 7 Ancient Silver Penny
Fig 8 A Reliquary of jewelry work which belonged to Catherine, second
Queen to Charles II
Fig 9 Token, \"Richard Fowle, of Elmesthorpe, 1800.\"
Fig 10 Seal of the \"Superieur de Coudres,\" St. Martin dividing his cloak.\"
Autographs:
Horatio Baron Nelson (written when Sir Horatio Nelson).
Admiral Sir Hugh Palliser, ob. 1796
John Duke and Sarah Dutchess of Marlborough
Plate 3. (foxing) Page 105 View of the Church and the Parsonage House at Boothby
Paynel, Lincolnshire. N.B. The latter was long the residence of Robert
Sanderson, Bishop of Lincoln
Plate 4. (foxing) Page 121
Fig 1 Plan of the Columns in front of the Temple of Diana at Ephesus.
See vol. LXXII. p. 1189
Fig 2 Design for a Flag, or new Union Jack
Fig 3 The Union Jack lately adopted
Fig 4 Design for the Royal Armorial Bearings
Fig 5 Shield of the present Royal Armorial Bearings, as borne since the
Union with lreland
Fig 6 Monumental Plate for Benjamin Avury (ob. 1675) and his Family in
the Church of Frome, Somersetshire.
Plate 5. (foxing) Page 201 View of the Ruins of Conisborough Castle, in Yorkshire
Plate 6. (foxing) Page 203* (bound in page 208)
Fig 1 Plan of the same
Fig 2, 3, 4, 5 Interior of the Keep, and Pillars there.
Autograph of Don Manuel de Godoy, Prince of Peace
Plate 7. (foxing) Page 297 View of the Entrance to Fonthill Abbey, Wiltshire,
exhibiting the reception of Admiral Lord Nelson, December 20, 1800, by
torchlight
Plate 8. (foxing) Page 306* (bound in page 213) View of the Somerset Almshouse at Froxfield, in Wiltshire
Plate 9. (foxing) Page 393* (bound in page 401)
Fig 1 View of the Cross at Hatfield, Yorkshire
Fig 2 Elevation of a Gateway at Edmonton, Middlesex
Plate 10. (foxing) Page 401 (bound in page 393) View of the Cheesecake House in Hyde Park, Middlesex
Plate 11. (foxing) Page 497
Fig 1 Medal of Gustavus III. King of Sweden, 1778
Fig 2 Inscription and Figures at the back of a monumental Brass Plate (which had served for another) for Edmund Page, in the Church of Shorne, in Kent
Fig 3 Seal of \"John Champenes,\" found at Cornhampton, Hants. - 623. 1184
Fig 4 Shield of Arms for Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, on a window at
Salisbury, Wilts - 698
Fig 5 Token, \"Richard Stent, at Hambledon, 1666.\"
Plate 12. (foxing) Page 505 Monument by Bacon for Mrs. Ann Allardyce, ob. 1787, in
the Church of St. Nicholas at Aberdeen, Scotland

Vol LXXI PART II 1801
Plate 1 (foxing) Page 593
Fig 1 View of the Church at Ticehurst, in Sussex
Fig 2 View of a picturesque object in Hagley Park, in Worcestershire, designed for a Castle in ruins. F. Cary sc.
Plate 2. (foxing) Page 601
Fig 1 New Badge for the King\'s Messengers
Fig 2 Plan for a Bee house. Moser sc.
Plate 3 (foxing). Page 689 Plans and View of an ancient Encampment at Marston Trussell, in Northamptonshire. Longmate sc.
Plate 4 (foxing). Page 697 Elevations and Plan for a Gaol at Bury, Suffolk, by Brown
Plate 5 (foxing). Page 785* (bound in page 905)
Fig 1 View of the Old Parsonage House of St Peter\'s, at Sandwich, Kent, in 1766
Fig 2 Inscription on the Wainstones in Yorkshire
Fig 3 View of a perforated Rock near Eyam, in Derbyshire. F. Cary sc.
Plate 6. (foxing) Page 793* (bound in page 793) Portrait of John Holt, of Walton, Lancashire, ob. 1801. - 285
Fig 1, 2 Figures to illustrate Grecian Architecture, Profile of the Epistyle, and the continued Stylobate.
Fig 3 Ancient Lamp of Brass, found near Hinckley, in Leicestershire
Fig 4 Ancient Horse shoe, found near the same place.
Fig 5 The form of an old Seal. See the impression of it at page 491
Fig 6, 7 Ancient Sculpture in the Church of Conisborough, in Yorkshire, supposed to represent St. Michael and the dragon - LXIX. 1067. LXXI. 888. LXXII. 39.
Plate 7 (foxing). Page 881 View of Old Sarum, Wiltshire
Plate 8. Page 897 Portrait of Sophonisba Angussola, an Italian Paintress. ob. 1625.
Distant View of St Leonard\'s Church, &c. Stamford, Lincolnshire - 903. See View in vol LXXIII p17
Plate 9 (foxing). Page 977
Fig 1 View of Vinegar Hill, in Ireland
Fig 2 Sculptured Capital of a Pillar at St Michael\'s Mount, Cornwall - 1094
Fig 3 Elevation of St Mary\'s Church at Bridgnorth, Shropshire
Fig 4 Ancient Seal of the Mayor of Dover, Kent
Fig 5 token, a Ship and three Pillars, \"Thus United, invincible\"
Fig 6 Token, \"William Bentley of Hinckley.\"
Autograph of King James I
Plate 10 (foxing). Page 985 Plan showing the numerous mounds of earth in Glamorganshire
Fig 1 to 7 New invented Plough
Autograph of Francis Atterbury, Bishop of Rochester in 1713
Plate 11 (foxing). Page 1073
Fig 1 View of Ditton Hall, in Cambridgeshire. Vol V
Fig 2 View of the Church at Grantchester, in Cambridgeshire, and Arms therein LXXII 36
Fig 3 A Fossil, the Comu Ammonis
Fig 4 Ancient Dagger
Fig 5 Inscription at Oriel College, Oxford, a motto of John Robinson, Bishop of London in 1713. F. Cary sc.
Plate 12 (foxing). Page 1081
Fig 1 View of the Church at Thornton, in Buckinghamshire
Fig 2 Ear of Corn with the Cockle growing within it
Fig 3 Seal Ring, a dog lying under a tree, \"J.L.\" found at Rosedale Abbey, Yorkshire.
Fig 4 Elevation of the Church at Rottingdean, Sussex
Plate 13 (dampstained, foxing). Page 1161
Fig 1, 2 View of the White Conduit, Islington, Middlesex; and the inscription thereon
Fig 3 View of Old Barn, near Parsons Green, Middlesex
Fig 4 A circular tesselated Pavement at Louth, Lincolnshire
Fig 5 Seal of Prince Suvvaroff, the famous Russian General
Fig 6 Autograph of Luther the Reformer
Plate 14 (foxing, trimmed at the top such that edge is cut off). Page 1169 View of the Ruins of Lantony Abbey, Monmouthshire. Angus sc.

Please note: any typos in the above listing are entirely our own. If you have specific questions about content please ask before offerding.

A note on offsetting: while it is normal for there to be offsetting of the images and text to the opposite page in texts of this era(offsetting is ink transfer from one page to the other, sometimes as a result of wet ink, sometimes from later pressure applied to the binding). As the prospective buyer, you should examine the photographs provided with this listing to get a good idea of whether this is an issue for you. Because the ink content is sometimes more acidic than the paper opposite, there is often a dark brown transfer of an engraving to the opposite page - to the point that the image is seen there in reverse. Some find this pleasing. Others (particularly on maps) find text offsetting to the map distracting. John Carter in his \"ABC\'s of Book Collecting\" defines Offset as \"The accidental transfer of ink from a printed page or illustration to an adjacent page. This can be caused either from the sheets having been folded, or the book bound, before the ink was properly dry, or from the book being subsequently exposed to damp...\" He also notes that offsetting can be used sometimes by the bibliographical detective, since it often occurs so soon after printing.



Other volumes of the Gentleman\'s Magazine: Over the next few months we will be listing a large run of this magazine as time allows. If you have specific years you want to be notified about please let us know and we will do our best to tell you when we offer them. YES, we will check if a specific article youcare aboutis included in the volume being offered. NO, we will not provide a complete listing of the contents - we simply don\'t have the time.

A note on completeness. Early magazines of this period, even those in their original published form can bemissing a gathering, or a plate (or more) or have one plate or gathering (a group of pages) bound in twice with others missing. This was a result of the publishing and binding process, the fact that often the plates were produced separately from the text, and that the binders sometimes had more text than plates printed. And of course, if bound together later in life, plates and/or articles were sometimes missing. And, printers and binders made mistakes being humans, or were up too late, or had to much fun the night before.

We make every effort to look for obvious gaps in the binding (where something might have been cut out) and to check for important articles we are aware of. But we can\'t check every page if we are tooffer these at an affordable price. So if you have a specific plate, article, or item that you need in a given volume, please ask. Otherwise you should assume that these are sold as a periodical, AS IS, not subject to return unless something we indicate is present in the volume is missing.

If we state that \"all the plates are present as called for\", this means thereare one or more printed pages which include \"binder\'s instructions\"intended to tellthe binder where to put each plate, and we have checked those instructions to make sure that the plates are all present \"as called for\". It is common for the plates to be bound in at another page, but when we note all plates are present, it means we\'ve found all the plates listed even if they aren\'t at the page in the binder\'s instructions.
Please see photos for condition and some content.
Please note that the watermark does not appear in the actual item.

The Gentleman\'s Magazine and Historical Chronicle was a monthly magazine which published from at least 1731-1850. Not only interesting for it\'s reporting of British history and antiquarian interests, it also records important information about events in the United States of America and other foreign states. A fascinating read for anyone interested in world eventsof the period. It is often just as interesting to note what ISN\'T being reported to the British (and world) reader base as it is what they chose to report on. Great stuff, and early.

Keywords: LRGM csgudmbook books hardcover historical collectible antiquarian history period periodical magazine
Jul July 07 7 Aug August 08 8 Sep September 09 9 Oct October 10 Nov November 11 Dec December 12
Jan January 01 1 Fed February 02 2 Mar March 03 3 Apr April 4 04 May 05 5 Jun June 6 06


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1801 Gentleman\'s Magazine Jan-Dec Illustrated History Foreign Affairs Domestic :
$139.98

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