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his own right at St Paul's
Churchyard in London, under the sign of the Bible next to the great door of St Paul's. Some of the early publications he printed were in partnership with John Royston. His former apprenticeship master, Arthur Johnson, went to Ireland in 1624 on behalf of the Stationers Company who wanted to establish an outlet in Dublin and, by 1626, William left London and took his family to Dublin. After Johnson's death in 1631 William took over the business and bought out his Stationers Company partners. He became the
63:, Bladen kept a journal of events which he sent to his son in London for him to publish as he had seen unreliable and inaccurate reports of occurrences and wanted to set the record straight. Although Bladen was clearly a supporter of the English Protestant administration in Dublin, his letters equally described brutalities that were carried out by his own side as well as the 'rebels'. He served as
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William was the son of Thomas Bladen, a yeoman of Newton Solney in
Derbyshire and was sent to London with his younger brother Richard to undertake an apprenticeship in 1602. Records for the Stationers Company show him being freed from his apprenticeship on 7 May 1610 after which he began trading in
229:
Bodleian
Library, Oxford: PB 365 Wood 507(31 and 26): Ireland's True Diurnal. A True and Exact Relation of the Chief Passages in Ireland since the first rising of the Rebels. Sent by an Alderman of Dublin to his son, now resident in London, 11 January
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and a younger son, William, who managed the Bladen print business in London. Bladen and his second wife, Eleanor
Pemberton, were married in 1654 in Dublin. His son, Thomas, continued the print business in Dublin after his father's death in 1663.
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and had a monopoly on printing, at least on official and state matters. He traded at Castle Street, Dublin close to
Werburgh Street where he was shown on the 1659 Census of Ireland as residing.
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A Dictionary of
Members of the Dublin Book Trade 1550–1800; based on the Records of the Guild of St Luke the Evangelist, Dublin, Mary Pollard, 2000
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gave the title to the Crooke printers instead. He remained in Dublin for the rest of his days and contributed financially to the restoration of
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Parish
Register of St Bride's Church, Fleet Street, London; William Blaydin and Mary Yonge married 13 April 1612
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Bladen married twice. His first marriage was to Mary Young in 1612 and they had at least two sons:
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H.R. Plomer: Some Notes on the Latin and Irish Stocks, Library 2nd Series 8, 1907, pp295-97
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Apprentices and
Freemen of the Company of Stationers of London 1562–1640
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H.R. Plomer: A Dictionary of the
Booksellers and Printers from 1641–67
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and Mayor (1647–1648) of Dublin and was present in Dublin during the
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IMC Census of
Ireland, 1659 (Irish Manuscripts Commission).
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British Library record for Enchiridion Medicum, 1612
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186:Bladens in Ireland, by Karen Proudler, 2015,
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30:in the 17th century. He served as Sheriff,
22:(1585–1663) was a bookseller and printer in
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123:Parish Registers for Egginton, Derbyshire
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202:Calendar of Ancient Records of Dublin
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132:Records of the Stationers Company
281:English expatriates in Ireland
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16:Mayor of Dublin, Ireland
271:Irish Rebellion of 1641
266:Lord mayors of Dublin
74:years and during the
92:St Werburgh's Church
61:1641 Irish Rebellion
192:978-0-9566831-7-5
76:Irish Confederacy
72:English Civil War
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88:Charles II
42:Early days
86:because
32:Alderman
230:1641/42
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98:Family
28:Dublin
24:London
188:ISBN
26:and
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