William Bosville

http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_Bosville

Le colonel William Bosville (1745-1813), FRS, de New Hall, Gunthwaite, de Thorpe Hall, Rudston, tous deux dans le Yorkshire, et de 76 Welbeck Street, St Giles-in-the-Fields, Londres est propriétaire terrien qui est connu comme un bon vivant. En politique, il est un whig ardent. Lorsque son ami William Cobbett est à la prison de Newgate, Bosville lui rend visite et lui remet ensuite 1 000 £ en guise de sympathie. Il est connu pour son excentricité. Il s'habillait toujours à la manière d'un courtisan du roi George II. En 1792, il est élu membre de la Royal Society. Il apparaît en tant que personnage mineur dans plusieurs caricatures politiques de James Gillray et deux de ses portraits ont été conservés à Thorpe Hall en 1927. rdf:langString
Colonel William Bosville (1745–1813), FRS, of New Hall, Gunthwaite, of Thorpe Hall, Rudston, both in Yorkshire, and of 76 Welbeck Street, St Giles in the Fields, London, was an English landowner and celebrated bon vivant. In politics he was an ardent Whig. When his friend William Cobbett was in Newgate Prison, Bosville went in his coach and four to visit him, and afterwards gave him a cheque for £1,000 as a token of sympathy with him in his persecutions. In appearance he was almost as eccentric as in his manners. He used always to dress in the style of a courtier of King George II, and wore a single-breasted coat, powdered hair and queue. In 1792 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London. He appears as a minor figure in several political caricatures by James Gillray and two po rdf:langString
rdf:langString William Bosville
rdf:langString William Bosville
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rdf:langString Le colonel William Bosville (1745-1813), FRS, de New Hall, Gunthwaite, de Thorpe Hall, Rudston, tous deux dans le Yorkshire, et de 76 Welbeck Street, St Giles-in-the-Fields, Londres est propriétaire terrien qui est connu comme un bon vivant. En politique, il est un whig ardent. Lorsque son ami William Cobbett est à la prison de Newgate, Bosville lui rend visite et lui remet ensuite 1 000 £ en guise de sympathie. Il est connu pour son excentricité. Il s'habillait toujours à la manière d'un courtisan du roi George II. En 1792, il est élu membre de la Royal Society. Il apparaît en tant que personnage mineur dans plusieurs caricatures politiques de James Gillray et deux de ses portraits ont été conservés à Thorpe Hall en 1927.
rdf:langString Colonel William Bosville (1745–1813), FRS, of New Hall, Gunthwaite, of Thorpe Hall, Rudston, both in Yorkshire, and of 76 Welbeck Street, St Giles in the Fields, London, was an English landowner and celebrated bon vivant. In politics he was an ardent Whig. When his friend William Cobbett was in Newgate Prison, Bosville went in his coach and four to visit him, and afterwards gave him a cheque for £1,000 as a token of sympathy with him in his persecutions. In appearance he was almost as eccentric as in his manners. He used always to dress in the style of a courtier of King George II, and wore a single-breasted coat, powdered hair and queue. In 1792 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London. He appears as a minor figure in several political caricatures by James Gillray and two portraits of him survived at Thorpe Hall in 1927.
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