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Sir Kenelm Digby (1603-1665), c.1635 (watercolour)
Editorial (Books, magazines and newspaper) - extended
Print and/or digital. Single use, any size, inside only. Single language only. Single territory rights for trade books; worldwide rights for academic books. Print run up to 5000. 7 years. (excludes advertising)
$175.00
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Print and/or digital. Single use, any size, inside only. Single language only. Single territory rights for trade books; worldwide rights for academic books. Print run up to 1500. 7 years. (excludes advertising)
$100.00
Corporate website, social media or presentation/talk
Web display, social media, apps or blogs.
Not for advertising. All languages. 1 year + archival rights
$190.00
Personal website, social media or presentation/talk
Web display, social media, apps, or blogs. Use in academic and non-commercial presentations/talks included. 5 years. Not for commercial use or advertising. All languages. 5 years
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Creator: John Hoskins
An oval miniature in watercolour on vellum in an oval gilt metal display frame, with a coiled upper mount for the suspension ring and a scroll label below engraved 'SIR KENELIN DIGBY'. Digby is shown head and part shoulders, half turned to his right but looking out to the viewer, wearing a broad starched white collar with a lace edge over a (mourning), doublet of black-laced vertical bands alternating with narrow white ones. He has blue eyes, receding reddish hair worn long at the back, and a beard and moustache in the Charles I style. The grey-tone background shows a rocky coast, with a ship sinking against a rock in the sea to the left and another partly seen, stern on, to the left of Digby's head. There is an Italian inscription round the upper left edge: 'morte; altro ben' homai non spero' (death; henceforth I hope for nothing better). With his apparent age and the loss of one vessel of two behind, on a calm sea, this may allude to Digby's grief after the sudden, unheralded death of his wife from a stroke early in 1633, when he wrote to his brother that 'I can have no physician but death'. The maritime alluson itself probabaly refers to his previous experience as a privateer commander and as a member of the Navy Board from about 1630. Digby was a courtier, soldier and natural philosopher, of an old Catholic family. His father, Sir Everard, was executed as one of the 'gunpowder plotters' but had secured his estates against forfeit. Kenelm was educated at Oxford and on the Grand Tour. In Paris, Queen Marie de Medicis became infatuated with him, from which he escaped to Florence and later joined his cousin, the Earl of Bristol, in Spain where he helped in Prince Charles's unsuccessful suit to marry the Spanish Infanta. On return home he became a gentleman of the prince's privy chamber and was knighted. He was subsequently involved in the arrangements of Charles's marriage to Henrietta Maria of France in 1624 and himself secretly married his childhood friend (and current lover), Venetia Stanley, in 1625. This was only made public after the birth of their second son early in 1628, when he commanded a privateering voyage against the French and Spanish in the Mediterranean, returning rich and a hero in February 1829. He thereafter largely spent the 1630s in academic, literary and philosophical enquiries, becoming again a firm Catholic after a brief Protestant dalliance and the death of his wife, which deeply affected him, he never remarried. In the Civil War, Digby raised money for the Royalist cause but was arrested and spent his time in prison writing. On release he went to France where he became Henrietta Maria's chancellor in exile, helped further fund-raising from the Pope with little success, and also corresponded as an intermediary with the Parlamentary regime to plead for Catholic toleration. In 1653 he returned to England and was an intermediary between Cromwell and Cardinal Mazarin of France. After his final return to England at the Restoration, in 1660, he was one of the founders of the Royal Society. Digby wrote a number of significant works of natural philosophy. Of charismatic personal qualities, he was a key 'Renaissance' figure in the English transition from the medieval age of magic to that of Enlightenment reason. He inherited a vast and valuable library from scholarly friends, from which he made generous donations to both the Bodleian Library, Oxford, and that of Harvard University at its foundation. Many portraits of him exist, including by van Dyck. Hoskins, called 'Old' or the Elder (c. 1590-1665), was painter and later a miniaturist, a skill he probably learnt from Hilliard, and passed on both to his son, John the younger, and his nephews and pupils Samuel and Alexander Cooper. Purchased for the Museum by Sir James Caird in 1941 from the Duke of Buccleuch.