C1825

Quadrupeds. Class mammalia. Genus Glires. Genus Castor Beaver. Genus Mus. Rat.

Artist:

Sydneham Edwards (1768 - 1819)

1. C. Fiber Beaver. 2. M. Zibethicus. Musk R. 3. M. Decumanus. Norway R. 4. M. Musculus, Common Mouse. 5. M. Cricetus, German Hamster R. 6. M. Bursarius, Canada R. 7. M. Capensis, Cape Mole R. From Cyclopaedia, or Universal … Read Full Description

$A 30

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S/N: REES-1825-ANI-OS-03–235213
(DRW01)
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Details

Full Title:

Quadrupeds. Class mammalia. Genus Glires. Genus Castor Beaver. Genus Mus. Rat.

Date:

C1825

Artist:

Sydneham Edwards (1768 - 1819)

Condition:

Some spotting on the right side of the image, otherwise in good condition.

Technique:

Copper engraving.

Image Size: 

190mm 
x 210mm

Paper Size: 

185mm 
x 270mm
AUTHENTICITY
Quadrupeds. Class mammalia. Genus Glires. Genus Castor Beaver. Genus Mus. Rat. - Antique Print from 1825

Genuine antique
dated:

1825

Description:

1. C. Fiber Beaver.

2. M. Zibethicus. Musk R.

3. M. Decumanus. Norway R.

4. M. Musculus, Common Mouse.

5. M. Cricetus, German Hamster R.

6. M. Bursarius, Canada R.
7. M. Capensis, Cape Mole R.

From Cyclopaedia, or Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and Literature made by 100 contributors, most of whom were nonconformists. They were specialists in their fields, covering the arts and humanities, agriculture, science, technology, and medicine. Artists like John Farey, Jr., and the engraver Wilson Lowry made the images.

Artist:

Sydneham Edwards (1768-1819)

Initially worked for Curtis’s Botanical Magazine, until a dispute with the publishers when he started his own rival magazine The Botanical Register.

He was born in Monmouthshire, a from an early age demonstrated a precocious talent for drawing and when only 11 years old had copied plates from Flora Londinens is. A friend of William Curtis, the publisher visited the Edwards and recommended the boy to Curtis. Curtis proceeded to have Edwards trained in both botany and botanical illustration. Edwards was a prolific talent and between 1787 and 1815 he produced over 1,700 watercolours for Curtis’s Botanical Magazine. He established The Botanical Register  in 1815 after a disagreement with John Sims, Curtis’s editor.

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