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FINETT ( Sir John )

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:120.00 - 180.00 EUR
FINETT ( Sir John )

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
FINETT ( Sir John ). Finetti Philoxenis : som[sic] choice observations of Sr. John Finett Knight, and Master of Ceremonies to the two last Kings, touching the reception, and precedence, the treatment and audience, the puntillios and contests of forren ambassadors in England. Printed by T. R. for H. Twyford and G. Bedell, 1656FIRST EDITION, pages (14), 250, (10), pagination erratic but complete but for the initial blank leaf, small 8vo, old roan-backed boards : a very good copy Finet (1570/71–1641), courtier and writer, become a fixture at court, renowned for writing and singing bawdy songs with Zouche and Goring, no examples of which are preserved, but his wit and polish stand out in his surviving work. Following his widow's death in 1652, a portion of his notebooks, mainly concerned with incidents during the reign of James I, was edited and published by James Howell as Finetti philoxenis : Some Choice Observations (1656), which became a major source for Wicquefort and others. Only in 1987 was the bulk of the remainder published, edited by Albert Loomie (ODNB).ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) [KAVANAGH ( James W. )]. Mixed Education. The catholic case stated : or principles, working, and results of the system of national education ; with suggestions for the settlement of the education question. Most respectfully dedicated to the Catholic Archbishops and Bishops of Ireland. By a catholic layman. Dublin:John Mullany, 1859. FIRST EDITION, pp xvi, (9)- 447, (1, errata), 8vo, original cloth, gilt : small stamp in two places, tear without loss in a blank flyleaf, little wear at headband, otherwise very good. he preface is dated March 17th, 1859. In early August of the same year the Catholic hierarchy were summoned by Archbishop Cullen to discuss educational matters : amongst other items, they sought separate schools for the religious denominations. (2) [CROKER ( John Wilson )]. A sketch of the state of Ireland, past and present. Second London edition. London : Printed for James Carpenter, Old Bond Street ; and M. N. Mahon, Dublin, 1808. Pages (8), 64, (6, adverts for books published by Carpenter), with the initial blank leaf and the half-title, and, tipped in before title, a 3, (1) page prospectus for Bryan’s Dictionary of Painting, and, tipped in opposite front endpaper, a (3)-page advert for the Shaftesbury Subscription Library, 8vo, old half calf, worn, rubbed and wanting backstrip, but the cords strong and otherwise a very good to nice, uncut copy. Supporting Catholic Emancipation. Croker’s Sketch (1808) went through twenty editions (it was reprinted as late as 1884) and gained him further notice. It advocated catholic emancipation, a system of national education for all sects, and the payment of the catholic clergy by the state to undermine the influence of Rome. He was harshly caricatured in several fictional works : as the contemptible Rigby in Disraeli's Coningsby; as Wenlan in Thackeray's Pendennis, and as Counsellor Con Crawley in Lady Morgan's Florence MacCarthy. (3) PARNELL ( Henry Brooke ), first Baron Congleton. A history of the penal laws against the Irish Catholics, from the Treaty of Lmerick to the Union. Dublin : Printed by H. Fitzpatrick, 1808. FIRST EDITION, pages (2), 226, xxxii, 8vo, original boards, uncut, neatly rebacked, with label : a very good copy. Parnell (1776–1842), a strong advocate of Catholic emancipation and of economic and political liberalisation in general (supported broadening of the franchise, freedom of labour and of capital, abolition of the corn laws, abolition of flogging and impressment, etc.), and, like his father, voted against the Union in 1799-1800. Shortly afterwards he became involved in the question of the Irish currency and of its subsequent amalgamation with the pound sterling. The economic expertise that he so gained made a powerful influence in the British parliament and brought him ministerial office. This, his most influential work on the Catholic Question, was several times reprinted in later years.(3)ENGLISH PRE 1701; DIPLOMACY; WING; IRELAND; EDUCATION; HISTORY; CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION; LAW; PENAL LAWS; ; ;