Roz
Hulse Ltd. - Beautiful Books, Maps & Prints
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Abergavenny Church.
Drawn and Engraved by J Cullum. ca1840.
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Abergavenny Church. Original hand coloured aquatint etching. Drawn
and Engraved by J Cullum. Ca 1840. Sheet and plate size 265mm x
205mm including blank border of 15mm and title Now known as St
Marys this Priory was a Monastery of Benedictine or Black Monks,
founded in the reign of Henry I between 1100 and 1135.
Abergavenny Church is recorded in the poem ‘The Worthiness of
Wales’ written near the end of the 16th Century, by Thomas
Churchyard who toured Wales in 1586. This poem, dedicated to Her
Most Excellent Majesty, Queen Elizabeth, gives much information
respecting the Church and the Monuments. The poem was first
published in 1587 and reprinted in 1776. Extensive alterations
took place in 1828 and Cathedral and Church architect Gilbert
Scott was to comment in 1874 "Few Churches have suffered from
decay and injudicious repair than this." Information regarding
the alternations would suggest this aquatint was completed after
the alternations, the leaded roof replaced by slates being the
most obvious indicator. An attractive, clean, bright and strong
print showing a building that was once described as the
Westminster Abbey of South Wales. |
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Cat. No. 92790
£100 |
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Note that the above image is a scanned
representation of the original. The colour variations of different
PC monitors makes it difficult to ensure you will see the image
exactly as it was rendered at source. The image is
reasonably accurate and the page is probably brighter than
indicated
(c)2010 Roz Hulse Ltd..
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