Cowdray engravings

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Cowdray Engravings

The Cowdray engravings comprise five 18th-century engravings of 16th-century wall-paintings, originally commissioned by Sir Anthony Browne. The original paintings were destroyed by fire in 1793.

History

The Cowdray engravings are based on five paintings produced for Sir

Henry VIII's Master of the Horse.[1] They were probably produced between 1545 and 1548 and were painted onto the walls of Browne's hall in Cowdray House.[2] They showed key scenes in his life and might have been used by him when recounting stories during formal events. The painting included The Departure of King Henry VIII from Calais, The Encampment of King Henry VIII at Marquison, The Siege of Boulogne by King Henry VIII, The Encampment of the English forces near Portsmouth and The riding of King Edward VI from the Tower of London to Westminster.[1]

Samuel Hieronymous Grimm copied the remaining four paintings which Basire then engraved.[1] The engravings were published in 1788 with a print run of 400 copies, distributed to fellow of the society and sold to the public.[5]

Cowdray House burnt down on 24 September 1793 and the paintings were mostly destroyed as the rendering came away from the walls, although some fragments may have survived for a few years after the fire.[6] This left the engravings as the only record.[2] The historian Bernard Nurse considers them to be "an important record of the sixteenth-century originals".[6]

  • Engraving and watercolour version of The Encampment of the English forces near Portsmouth
    Engraving and
    watercolour
    version of The Encampment of the English forces near Portsmouth
  • The Siege of Boulogne by King Henry VIII
    The Siege of Boulogne by King Henry VIII

References

  1. ^ a b c Dominic Fontana, "The Cowdray Engravings and the Loss of the Mary Rose", University of Portsmouth, archived from the original on 1 July 2016, retrieved 13 May 2016
  2. ^ a b Dominic Fontana, "The Cowdray Engravings and the Loss of the Mary Rose", University of Portsmouth, archived from the original on 1 July 2016, retrieved 13 May 2016; Nurse 2012, p. 371
  3. ^ Nurse 2012, p. 375
  4. ^ Dominic Fontana, "The Cowdray Engravings and the Loss of the Mary Rose", University of Portsmouth, archived from the original on 1 July 2016, retrieved 13 May 2016; Bernard Nurse (2007), "Bringing Truth to Light" (PDF), Society of Antiquaries, retrieved 13 May 2016; Nurse 2012, p. 376
  5. ^ Dominic Fontana, "The Cowdray Engravings and the Loss of the Mary Rose", University of Portsmouth, archived from the original on 1 July 2016, retrieved 13 May 2016; Bernard Nurse (2007), "Bringing Truth to Light" (PDF), Society of Antiquaries, retrieved 13 May 2016
  6. ^ a b Nurse 2012, p. 371

Bibliography

  • Nurse, Bernard (2012). "The Sherwin Brothers' Copy of the Lost Mary Rose Wall Painting at Cowdray House". The Antiquaries Journal. 92: 371–384.
    S2CID 161297090
    .

External links