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COSGRAVE ( Ephraim Macdowel ), M

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:150.00 - 200.00 EUR
COSGRAVE ( Ephraim Macdowel ), M

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
COSGRAVE ( Ephraim Macdowel ), M.D. Dublin and Co. Dublin in the twentieth century. Contemporary Biographies. Edited by W. T. Pike. Pike's New Century Series. No. 26. Brighton and London : W. T. Pike, 1908FIRST EDITION, profusely illustrated with views and portraits, pages 286, (2), large 4to, original publisher's full morocco, richly gilt, edges gilt : lightly rubbed and just a little worn, but the attractive, ornate binding sound and strong and still a very good copy. A valuable work : notably scarce. With biographies of over 500 distinguished Dubliners, each with a portrait : the various groupings include, nobility and gentry, magistrates, clergy, the bench and the bar, legal, medical, scholastic, literary and musical, auctioners, land agents, engineers, architects, and, accountants.ALSO WITH THIS LOT: O'BRIEN ( Henry ). The Round Towers of Ireland ; or, the history of the Tuath-de-Danaas for the first time unveiled. Second edition. London : Parbury and Allen … Dublin : J. Cumming, 1834. With 4 plates and 28 other, mostly full-page, illustrations, pages (4), (2, adverts), 524 and errata/advert leaf, 8vo, original cloth-backed boards, with printed paper spine label : the label lightly chipped, otherwise a very good copy in original state.Enthusiastic and self-deluding, O'Brien (1808-35), wrote a dissertation for a prize offered by the Royal Irish Academy. Although he did not win, he was awarded a small gratuity. The object of this present work (an expanded version of his prize essay) was to show that the round towers were Buddhistic remains. The book was condemned as wild and extravagant in the Gentleman's Magazine and by George Petrie, a fellow Irish antiquary. Thomas Moore wrote a hostile review in the Edinburgh Review, and, in response O'Brien accused Moore of appropriating his discoveries in his History of Ireland. F. S. Mahony, known as Father Prout, a warm friend and admirer of O'Brien's, came to his defence in The Reliques of Father Prout (1836). (ODNB).(2)IRELAND; DUBLIN; BIOGRAPHY; HISTORY; CELTIC STUDIES; ; ; ; ; ; ;