Edward Worth (politician)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Edward_Worth_(politician) an entity of type: Thing

Edward Worth, FRS, (1678– March 2d 1733) was an Irish politician, physician and book collector. He was born into a prosperous Church of Ireland family, his father being John Worth (1648-1688), Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, who was a younger son of Edward Worth (1620-1669), Bishop of Killaloe and his wife Susannah Pepper. His father's eldest brother William Worth was an eminent judge. Edward's mother was named Comfort: she died in 1681. Edward was one of about ten children but only he and his brother Michael reached adulthood. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Edward Worth (politician)
rdf:langString Edward Worth
rdf:langString Edward Worth
xsd:date 1733-03-02
xsd:integer 18227845
xsd:integer 1098559558
xsd:date 1733-03-02
rdf:langString Physician and bibliophile
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for New Ross
xsd:integer 1715
rdf:langString Edward Worth, FRS, (1678– March 2d 1733) was an Irish politician, physician and book collector. He was born into a prosperous Church of Ireland family, his father being John Worth (1648-1688), Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, who was a younger son of Edward Worth (1620-1669), Bishop of Killaloe and his wife Susannah Pepper. His father's eldest brother William Worth was an eminent judge. Edward's mother was named Comfort: she died in 1681. Edward was one of about ten children but only he and his brother Michael reached adulthood. Worth studied medicine in Oxford (matriculated 1693), Leiden and Utrecht (MD 1701) before practising as a doctor in Dublin. A financial windfall from his uncle William helped him to establish a large book collection, bought from places such as London, the Netherlands, France and Dublin, in addition to those he had inherited from his father and grandfather. On his death the collection consisted of some 4,400 books, many on medicine, dating back in some cases to the fifteenth century. Worth left his library, then valued at £5,000, to Dr Steevens' Hospital in Kilmainham, of which he was a governor. The hospital built a special room to house the books, which remain there today. According to a 2008 Irish Times article, the books have been stored well and are in remarkably good condition. Edward Worth was an important figure in the Dublin of his day. He was a friend and contemporary of such people as Jonathan Swift, and his library is remarkable, not only for its size and variety, but also for the condition of the books, some of which are hundreds of years old but appear almost new. Between 1715 and 1727, Worth sat in the Irish House of Commons for New Ross. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in January 1699. Malicious gossip said that he was a very heavy drinker, especially in his last years." A perfect sot... put to bed drunk three times a day" was one comment after his death. He is buried in the family tomb in St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8567
xsd:gYear 1678
xsd:gYear 1733

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