William Wotton - John Evelyn - 1698-01-20

From Fina Wiki


William Wotton, Milton

William Wotton - John Evelyn - 1698-01-20
FINA IDUnique ID of the page  16255
InstitutionName of Institution.
InventoryInventory number.
AuthorAuthor of the document. William Wotton
RecipientRecipient of the correspondence. John Evelyn
Correspondence dateDate when the correspondence was written: day - month - year . January 20, 1698
PlacePlace of publication of the book, composition of the document or institution. Milton 51° 50' 27.20" N, 0° 53' 59.32" W
Associated personsNames of Persons who are mentioned in the annotation. John Greaves, Philip Skippon, Edmund Gibson, William Camden, Jean Hardouin
LiteratureReference to literature. Greaves 16471, Hardouin 16842, Camden 16953, Evelyn 16974, Bray - Wheatley 1906, vol. 4, pp. 19-215, Burnett 2020b, pp. 832-36
KeywordNumismatic Keywords  Local Finds , Book , Saxon , Greek , Delphi
LanguageLanguage of the correspondence English
External LinkLink to external information, e.g. Wikpedia  https://archive.org/details/diaryofjohnevely0000unse j9l2/page/18/mode/2up
Map
Loading map...
You can move or zoom the map to explore other correspondence!
Grand documentOriginal passage from the "Grand document".

'I had just got a box of papers, & was going to digest matters for the forge, when I was agreeably stopp’d by your admirable Numismata, wch the last return of the carrier brought me. I needed no spur to read it; ye author, ye subject, added wings to my diligence. ... I was so truly charmed, so pleasingly taught thro’ the whole work, that ye grief of being so soon at an end, wrought as violently at last as the joy I felt as I went along. The printer, indeed, raised my indignation; I was angry with him, & troubled to see my pen so often disfigure so elegant a book. ... My head is so very full of what I have learned & am to learn by your instructions, that I had almost forgotten to thank you for your honourable mention of my poor performances in so standing a work. ... My most honoured friend ye late Sr Philip Skippon, who had a noble cabinet of Medals, wch he thoroughly understood, sent me an account of some Saxon coyns found in Suffolke, which I printed with some remarks of my own in ye Transact. N° 187, with the initial letters of both our names. The new editor of Camden took no notice of these coyns, tho I gave them warning, & tho there are some here wch are not in their collection. You have been pleased to referr to them, for wch, Sir, I am bound to express my thanks. But this is not all. I have been censured heavily for blaming Sr W. T.’s Delphos, & substituting Delphi in its place. Your authority will now (if I am publickly a........) decide ye controversy. I am opposed with an authority of a Medal in F. Hardouin’s Num'i Urbium, with this inscription, ΔΕΛΦΟΥ, ye genitive, say they, of Delphos, ye nominative of the name of the city. I use to reply that it was the genitive of Delphus, Apollo’s son, mentioned by severall of ye ancients; wch explication you confirm, p. 189, where you inform these cavallers, that Εἰκῶν or Νομισμα, is understood. Tis time to release you; onely pray, Sir, do me the favor at your leisure to inform me, whether there is ever another Coyne published with the Bipennis Tenedia upon it, besides that wch John Graves printed in his Roman Denarius.' (Bray - Wheatley 1906, vol. 4, pp. 19-21; Burnett 2020b, pp. 832-3)

References

  1. ^  Greaves, John (1647) A discourse of the Roman foot, and Denarius: from whence, as from two principles, the measures, and weights, used by the ancients, may be deduced, London.
  2. ^  Hardouin, Jean (1684), Nummi antiqui populorum et urbium illustrati, François Muguet. Paris.
  3. ^  Camden, William (ed. Edmund Gibson)(1695) Britannia, London.
  4. ^  Evelyn, John. 1697. Numismata. A Discourse of Medals, Antient and Modern. Together with Some Account of Heads and Effigies of Illustrious, and Famous Persons, of Whom We Have no Medals Extant and of the Use to Be Derived from Them. To Which is Added a Digression concerning Physiognomy. London: for Benjamin Tooke.
  5. ^ Bray - Wheatley 1906 
  6. ^  Burnett, Andrew M. (2020), The Hidden Treasures of this Happy Land. A History of Numismatics in Britain from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment, BNS Special Publ. No 14 = RNS Special Publ. No 58, London, Spink & Son.