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Catalogue: England
The University Museum.
The University Museum.
Drawn & Engraved by J.H.Le Keux.
Published by J.H. Parker, Oxford, Nov.r. 1st. 1859.
Mint etching. Plate: 400 x 340mm (15¾ x 13½"), with very large margins.
A view of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History which was completed in 1861 after a neo-gothic design by Deane and Woodward.
[Ref: 40623]   £260.00   (£312.00 incl.VAT)
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Oxford. Südseite.
Oxford. Südseite.
N.d. Nat.gez.v. C. Rundt, lith.v.F. Tempeltei.
Druck d. Königl.lith Instituts zu Berlin. [n.d. c.1846.]
Tinted lithograph, scarce with very large margins. Blindstamp centre title area: CR. 514 x 666mm. 20¼ x 26¼".
A wonderful view of Oxford, with the dome of the Radcliffe Camera, and the spires and high roofs of King's College, All Saints Church and other colleges of Oxford University; shepherds with their dogs sat in the near foreground with their flocks of sheep in the middleground. From Carl Rundt's "Views of the most picturesque Colleges in the University of Oxford" which was published in Berlin in two parts with five lithographed plates and four pages of discriptive text in English and German to each part and with a note recommending Ingram's Memorials of Oxford.
[Ref: 27507]   £720.00  
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[An Oxfordshire Lane.]
[An Oxfordshire Lane.]
YM [John Mallows Youngman]
[n.d.c. 1899]
Etching, plate 215 x 160mm (8½ x 6¼"), with small margins. Some creasing outside image. Paper toned. Abrasions at very top of image. Messy.
A country scene in Oxfordshire. Two women stand outside a building in a stream. A girl scavenges the water. A church can be seen in the background. John Mallows Youngman (1817-99) painter, etcher and father of British painter Annie Mary Youngman (1859 –1919).
[Ref: 61183]   £50.00   (£60.00 incl.VAT)
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The Radcliffe Infirmary.
The Radcliffe Infirmary.
F. Mackenzie. J. Le Keux.
Published March 1, 1834 by J.H. Parker, Oxford; C. Tilt, Fleet Street, & J. Le Keux, Harmondsworth.
Engraving. Plate: 140 x 180mm (5½ x 7"), with large margins.
A view of the Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford. The hospital was name after doctor John Radcliffe and was opened in 1770.
[Ref: 45921]   £60.00   (£72.00 incl.VAT)
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Stanton Harcourt - Oxon.
Stanton Harcourt - Oxon.
[Drawn & Engraved by Cha.s Tomkins.]
[London: Printed by J. Whiting, Finsbury Place, For J. Manson, Gerrard Street, Soho; and sold by Messrs. White, Fleet Street; T. Payne, Mews Gate; Greenland and Norris, Finsbury Square; H.D. Symonds, Paternoster Row; by the principal Booksellers in Berkshire and the adjoining Counties 1805.]
Aquatint. 216 x 280mm. 8½ x 11". Cut.
Stanton Harcourt, a village and civil parish in Oxfordshire. The village is mentioned in the Domesday Book, and is probably named after the prehistoric stone circle known as the Devil's Quoits. An early unfortified Manor House, built to house the Harcourt family in the late 14th century; however most of the house was dismantled to use as foundations for Nuneham Courtney in 1756. One of the surviving parts is the medieval kitchen with its octagonal roof seen here on the left. The kitchen is open to the rafters, and smoke from the open fire would gather in the conical roof space, ventilated by louvers in the base of the roof.
Abbey: 292: 44.
[Ref: 17823]   £90.00   (£108.00 incl.VAT)
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Pope's Tower and Garden - and the Church. Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire.
Pope's Tower and Garden - and the Church. Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire.
PD [in image lower right.]
Spring Gardens Sketch Book. Printed by Maclure, Macdonald, & Macgregor, Lith: to The Queen, London.
Lithograph, sheet 280 x 395mm (11 x 15½"). Trimmed to image.
Pope's Tower in the grounds of Harcourt House, in the village of Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire. Built around 1470, the tower (now Grade I listed) acquired its name after the poet Alexander Pope stayed there in 1717-8 and translated the fifth volume of Homer's 'Iliad' there. Plate from the 'Spring Gardens Sketch Book' (8 vols., 1870-90). The architect Sir George Gilbert Scott (1811-78) had his office at Spring Gardens, near Trafalgar Square in London, from 1838 onwards. The publication of the 'Sketch Book' functioned as a form of advertising to promote the gifts of Scott's practice, with plates designed by his pupils and apprentices.
See William Whyte, 'Oxford Jackson: Architecture, Education, Status and Style 1835-1924'. Ex collection of the Late Hon. C. Lennox-Boyd.
[Ref: 40649]   £120.00   (£144.00 incl.VAT)
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View of the Ruins of the Kitchen at Stanton-Harcourt in the County of Oxford.
View of the Ruins of the Kitchen at Stanton-Harcourt in the County of Oxford.
Etch'd by Newnham 1763. Drawn after Nature by P. Sandby.
Etching, very scarce, early issue before Society of Antiquaries. 400 x 520mm. 15¾ x 20½". Very fine.
An early unfortified Manor House, built to house the Harcourt family in the late 14th century; however most of the house was dismantled to use as foundations for Nuneham Courtney in 1756. One of the surviving parts is the medieval kitchen with its octagonal roof seen here on the left. The kitchen is open to the rafters, and smoke from the open fire would gather in the conical roof space, ventilated by louvers in the base of the roof. The artist on these engraved views is as family member. George Simon, Viscount Nuneham, later second earl Harcourt (1736 - 1809), was taught by Paul Sandby (1725 - 1809), and was a member of the Society of Dilettanti. The manor has remained in the Harcourt family to the present day.
[Ref: 17829]   £480.00  
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