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Aedes Hartwellianae

Aedes Hartwellianae

Aedes Hartwellianae

Or, Notices of the Manor and Mansion of Hartwell
Volume 1:
William Henry Smyth
February 2014
1
Available
Paperback
9781108066471
$73.00
USD
Paperback

    The astronomer John Lee (1783–66) inherited Hartwell House in Buckinghamshire in 1827. During its colourful history, the mansion had notably been occupied between 1809 and 1814 by the exiled court of Louis XVIII. Lee turned the house into something of a museum for his antiquarian and scientific interests, constructing an observatory to the design of the his close friend William Henry Smyth (1788–1865), after whom Lee named a lunar sea. A naval officer, Smyth had helped to found the Royal Geographical Society in 1830. His Sidereal Chromatics (1864) and The Sailor's Word-Book (1867) are also reissued in this series. This charming history and description of Hartwell, its grounds, buildings and contents, appeared in two volumes between 1851 and 1864, illuminating especially the practice of contemporary astronomy. Illustrated throughout, the first volume (1851) includes coverage relating to the locality, the lords of the manor, the collected antiquities and the observatory.

    Product details

    February 2014
    Paperback
    9781108066471
    452 pages
    297 × 210 × 23 mm
    1.08kg
    63 b/w illus. 1 colour illus. 2 maps
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Details respecting the parish and manor of Hartwell: locality, geology, produce, and general statistics
    • 2. The successive lords of the manor of Hartwell, from the Conquest to the present time: Peverel, De Hertewell, Luton, Hampden, and Lee
    • 3. Particulars respecting Hartwell House: its appartments, paintings, library, museum, numismata, and Egyptian antiquities
    • 4. Origin of the Hartwell Observatory. The transit-room. The equatorial tower. Mr Epps's meridional observations. The double-stars measured by Captain Smyth. Encke's comet. The meteorological department
    • Appendix
    • Index.
      Author
    • William Henry Smyth