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filled with heaps of papers, MSS, books, charters, packages & other things, lying in heaps under your feet, piled upon tables, beds, chairs, ladders &c.&c. and in every room, piles of huge boxes, up to the ceiling, containing the more valuable volumes! It is quite sickening...The windows of the house are never opened, and the close confined air & smell of the paper & MSSis almost unbearable.
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The house looks more miserable and dilapidated every time I visit it, and there is not a room now that is not crowded with large boxes full of MSS. The state of things is really inconceivable. Lady P is absent, and were I in her place, I would never return to so wretched an abode. . . . Every room is
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and the relative cheapness of a large amount of vellum material, in particular
English legal documents, many of which owe their survival to Phillipps. He was an assiduous cataloguer who established the Middle Hill Press (Typis Medio-Montanis) in 1822 not only to record his book holdings but also to
232:
notes that, " spent perhaps between two hundred thousand and a quarter of a million pounds altogether four or five thousand pounds a year, while accessions came in at the rate of forty or fifty a week.". Phillipps would go into bookshops and purchase the entire stock; he would receive dealers'
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declared this too restrictive and thus made possible the sale of the library which
Phillipps's grandson, Thomas FitzRoy Fenwick, supervised for the next fifty years. Significant portions of the European material were sold to the national collections on the continent including the
283:
minus the title page containing
Phillipps' book stamp) and also a destroyer of other valuable old books, cutting out pages to stick them in his scrapbook. At least 105 wagon-loads, each drawn by two horses and accompanied by one or two men, were used to move the collection to
455:. While still an undergraduate at Cambridge, Halliwell had collaborated in research with Phillipps. He came to visit Thomas Phillipps in February 1842 and became attached to Harriett. Phillipps refused to allow his daughter to marry and the couple
185:
Such was his devotion that he acquired some 40,000 printed books and 60,000 manuscripts, arguably the largest collection a single individual has created, and coined the term "vello-maniac" to describe his obsession, which is more commonly termed
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In 1850, at a meeting of the
Cambrian Archaeological society (Cymdeithas Hynafiaethau Cymru), Phillips announced that he was seeking to locate his large collection at a location in Wales. He employed a distant relative by marriage,
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who amassed the largest collection of manuscript material in the 19th century. He was an illegitimate son of a textile manufacturer and inherited a substantial estate, which he spent almost entirely on
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Phillipps married
Henrietta Elizabeth Molyneux, daughter of Major-General Thomas Molyneux, in 1819. This was after the death of his father, who had opposed the match because she lacked a
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for Β£100,000, though this part of the collection was uncatalogued and unexamined. The
Robinsons endeavoured to sell these books through their own published catalogues and a number of
273:, would gain ownership of it when Phillipps's estranged daughter inherited Middle Hill. Halliwell was apparently a book thief (Phillips accused Halliwell of stealing his 1603 copy of
181:
manuscripts and, when out of funds, borrowed heavily to buy manuscripts, thereby putting his family deep into debt. Phillipps recorded in an early catalogue that his collection
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791:. Die Althochdeutschen Glossen, Vol. III. pp. 390β404. Phillipps' collection included another manuscript of a work by Hildegard, one of the earliest copies of her
233:
catalogues and buy all the listings; his agents bought entire lots of books at auction, outbidding his rival the
British Museum. His country seat, Middle Hill near
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of the
British Museum, of his manuscripts was Β£74,779 17s 0d. His success as a collector owed something to the dispersal of the monastic libraries following the
1200:
358:
Phillipps's will stipulated that his books should remain intact at
Thirlestaine House, that no bookseller or stranger should rearrange them and that no
210:). Later in life he is recorded to have said that he wanted to own one of every book in the world. Philipps began collecting in earnest while still at
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As the
Phillippses had only daughters the title became extinct on his death in February 1872, aged 79. He was buried at the Church of St Eadburgha in
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Catalogue of the late Lord Northwick's extensive and magnificent collection of ancient and modern pictures, cabinet of miniatures and enamels...
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of Middle Hill in the County of Worcester at the age of 29. The honour was the result of his father-in-law's connections with the
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Alan Bell, 'Phillipps, Sir Thomas, baronet (1792β1872)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, (2004)
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During his lifetime, Phillipps attempted to turn over his collection to the British nation and corresponded with the then-
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over a period of eight months, leaving Middle Hill to fall to ruin. The previous owner of Thirlestaine House was
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795:, now Berlin, Staatsbibliothek Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Ms. theol.lat. fol. 727; see Hildegardis Bingensis,
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Portrait of an Obsession: The Life of Sir Thomas Phillipps, the worldβs greatest book collector
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libraries. By 1946, what was known as the "residue" was sold to London booksellers Phillip and
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241:, the keeper of manuscripts of the British Museum, visited the house, he wrote in his diary:
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459:. Phillipps was enraged by this and maintained a lifelong vendetta against the couple.
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on 7 June 2006, lots 18β38. A five-volume history of the collection and its dispersal,
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In 1863, Phillipps began to move the collection as he was fearful that his son-in-law,
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Provenance & Dispersal of Thomas Phillipps MS. 2506/Chester Beatty Western MS. 173
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was instigated by reading various accounts of the destruction of valuable manuscripts.
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In 1808, when Phillipps was 16 years old, he already owned 112 books (largely Gothic
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Still life with ancient Babylonian artefacts on books, salted paper print, 1853, by
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500:"Sir Thomas Phillipps, antiquary: collections relating to Gloucestershire"
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Broadway Tower, Worcestershire. The home of Phillipps' Middle Hill Press
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Phillipps' eldest daughter, Harriett, married the Shakesperean scholar
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Thirlestaine House, Phillipps' home during the latter part of his life
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Henrietta (born 1819), Sophia (born 1821), and Katharine (born 1829)
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544:. Vol. 45. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 192β195.
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Annual register 1825, Volume 67, p.192 edited by Edmund Burke
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After Phillipps died in 1872, the probate valuation, made by
1068:, in "Freud collectionneur", Ed. Campagnes première, 2011,
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as well as the sale of outstanding individual items to the
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The Horblit collection of Middle Hill Press books at the
413:, by A. N. L. Munby was published between 1951 and 1960.
841:"Broadway Tower, Middle Hill, Broadway (Worcestershire)"
799:, ed. A. Carlevaris (Turnout: Brepols, 1996), p. xlvii.
712:"Luminous-Lint β Photographer β Amelia Elizabeth Guppy"
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sales. The final portion of the collection was sold by
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completed on Broadway Hill, Worcestershire, in 1798.
214:, and his manuscript catalogue from 1811, now at the
237:, gave over sixteen of twenty rooms to books. After
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Escutcheon of the Phillipps baronets of Middle Hill
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815:"Sir Thomas Phillipp?s School Notebooks and Bills"
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222:and graduated in 1815. In 1820, he was elected a
159:Thomas Phillipps and Hannah Walton (illegitimate)
1211:Baronets in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom
900:, London, King Street, 7 June 2006, lots 18β38.
777:e.g. Codex Cheltenhamensis 9303, containing the
168:(2 July 1792 β 6 February 1872), was an English
1015:"Phillipps, Sir Thomas, baronet (1792β1872)".
506:. Gloucestershire City Council. Archived from
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1021:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
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586:"Sir Thomas Phillipps's Earliest Catalogue"
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504:Gloucestershire Archives: Online Catalogue
141:Henrietta Elizabeth Molyneux (1819β1832);
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864:"Reconstructing the Phillipps Collection"
623:. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp.
143:Elizabeth Harriet Anne Mansel (1848β1872)
30:For other people with similar names, see
1018:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
491:
1206:English book and manuscript collectors
1000:, New York City, 1995 and 1999, 958 p.
898:Valuable Manuscripts and Printed Books
741:. Adventures Unlimited Press, p. 160.
351:so that it should be acquired for the
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1201:Alumni of University College, Oxford
1066:Sir Thomas Phillipps: un bibliophile
785:. Steinmayer E; Sievers, E. (1895).
738:Eccentric Lives and Peculiar Notions
27:English antiquary and book collector
918:. The University Press, Cambridge.
695:Madden, Sir Frederick (1819β1872).
470:Items from the Phillipps Collection
1096:Works by or about Thomas Phillipps
25:
294:John Rushout, 2nd Baron Northwick
166:Sir Thomas Phillipps, 1st Baronet
1154:
1114:Baronetage of the United Kingdom
584:Ellwood, Scott (31 March 2020).
541:Dictionary of National Biography
317:publish his findings in English
49:
32:Thomas Phillips (disambiguation)
1231:High sheriffs of Worcestershire
940:Curious Britain: Broadway Tower
378:, and the Provincial Archives (
446:High Sheriff of Worcestershire
55:Sir Thomas Phillipps, ca. 1860
1:
996:, St Martin's Press Edition,
967:. 28 July 1821. p. 1555.
699:. Oxford, Bodleian Libraries.
1226:Accidental deaths from falls
1221:Fellows of the Royal Society
1035:UK public library membership
915:Phillipps studies. Nos. 1-5
788:Sachlich geordnete Glossare
346:Chancellor of the Exchequer
224:Fellow of the Royal Society
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1011:. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
325:. The press was housed in
220:University College, Oxford
118:University College, Oxford
109:, Broadway, Worcestershire
29:
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1087:Works by Thomas Phillipps
912:Munby, A.N.L. (1951β60).
653:29 September 2006 at the
535:"Phillipps, Thomas"
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1064:Michelle Moreau-Ricaud:
984:Sources and bibliography
735:Michell, John F (1999).
615:Rasmussen, Eric (2011).
376:Royal Library of Belgium
235:Broadway, Worcestershire
43:Sir Thomas Phillipps, Bt
896:Christie's, sale 7233,
453:James Orchard Halliwell
279:, which he sold to the
271:James Orchard Halliwell
1027:10.1093/ref:odnb/22143
619:The Shakespeare Thefts
433:
341:
264:Amelia Elizabeth Guppy
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256:Amelia Elizabeth Guppy
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843:. Historicbritain.com
812:contains 558 titles,
590:The Grolier Club Blog
436:In 1821, he was made
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372:Royal Library, Berlin
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1216:English antiquarians
1045:, 5 vols. 1951β1960.
990:Nicholas A. Basbanes
945:8 March 2012 at the
821:on 29 September 2006
797:Liber Vite Meritorum
793:Liber Vite Meritorum
18:Sir Thomas Phillipps
783:Hildegard of Bingen
476:Rochefoucauld Grail
444:. He was appointed
395:Henry E. Huntington
239:Sir Frederic Madden
1160:Phillipps baronets
964:The London Gazette
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391:J. Pierpont Morgan
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286:Thirlestaine House
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91:Thirlestaine House
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1170:Succeeded by
1091:Project Gutenberg
1043:Phillipps Studies
1033:(Subscription or
716:luminous-lint.com
710:Griffiths, Alan.
411:Phillipps Studies
367:Court of Chancery
314:French Revolution
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16:(Redirected from
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1173:Harnage baronets
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1131:(of Middle Hill)
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867:. Retrieved
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845:. Retrieved
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823:. Retrieved
819:the original
810:Grolier Club
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721:13 September
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107:St Eadburgha
85:(1872-02-06)
36:
1196:1872 deaths
1191:1792 births
1062:(in French)
1050:BBC Radio 4
959:"No. 17730"
869:19 December
847:1 September
530:Lee, Sidney
514:8 September
310:Edward Bond
188:bibliomania
128:antiquarian
71:2 July 1792
1185:Categories
1135:1821β1872
1074:2915789665
1037:required.)
883:Basbanes,
567:Basbanes,
407:Christie's
319:topography
290:Cheltenham
105:Church of
95:Cheltenham
74:Manchester
67:1792-07-02
1052:play, by
998:Manhattan
487:Citations
448:in 1825.
403:Sotheby's
323:genealogy
298:intestate
208:chapbooks
170:antiquary
156:Parent(s)
138:Spouse(s)
1139:Extinct
943:Archived
924:10943837
887:, p. 122
767:. (1859)
763:sold by
651:Archived
595:22 April
569:op. cit.
558:, p. 120
464:Broadway
349:Disraeli
148:Children
1127:Baronet
1098:at the
885:op. cit
697:Journal
685:, 1967.
438:baronet
387:Utrecht
1072:
1031:
1004:
922:
745:
631:
571:p. 121
457:eloped
417:Family
374:, the
304:Legacy
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