Edmund Prideaux (1693–1745)

Edmund Prideaux (1693–1745) of Prideaux Place, Padstow, Cornwall, was a member of the landed gentry of Cornwall, and a talented amateur architectural artist.

Edmund Prideaux (1693–1745) of Prideaux Place, 1730 portrait by William Aikman, collection of National Trust, Blickling Hall, Norfolk. Prideaux Place is shown in the background

Origins

He was christened on 22 February 1693 at Soham Tony, Norfolk[1] and was the only surviving son of Very Rev. Humphrey Prideaux (1648–1724), Dean of Norwich from 1702,[2] (3rd son of Edmund Prideaux (d.1683) of Prideaux Place, Sheriff of Cornwall in 1664, by his wife Bridget Moyle) by his wife Bridget Bokenham (d.1700), daughter of Anthony Bokenham of Helmingham, Suffolk.[3]

Youth

His mother died when he was aged 7 after which he developed a strong bond with his father, as is apparent from Edmund's writings.[4]

Career

1716 drawing by Edmund Prideaux of Heanton Satchville, Petrockstowe, Devon, demolished

He was admitted a fellow commoner at Clare Hall, Cambridge on 22 May 1711 and became a lawyer, having entered the Middle Temple on 10 February 1711/2 and having been called to the bar in 1718.[5] From about the age of 21 he visited several country houses belonging to the Prideaux family and friends, and made many "topographical drawings", many of which survive as valuable records of houses since demolished or altered, for example Stowe, Kilkhampton in Cornwall and Heanton Satchville, Petrockstowe in Devon. Following the death of his wife at a young age, he "immersed himself in the study of all scholarly matters, particularly architecture and garden design".[6] Unusually late in life, in about 1739 at the age of 46, he made a Grand Tour of Italy and brought back to England a collection of pictures and Roman antiquities. He was well-travelled, as is apparent from the contents of his surviving cash-book.[7]

Inheritance

In 1728, at the age of 35 and 2 years after his wife's death, he inherited Prideaux Place from his first cousin Edmund Prideaux (d.1728), who died without progeny, the eldest son of John Prideaux by his wife Anne Mallock.[8] He remodelled both the interior and exterior of the house and landscaped the grounds, adding garden buildings and a wilderness with serpentine paths.[9]

Marriage and progeny

On 17 April 1717 he married Hannah Wrench (1697–1726), daughter of Sir Benjamin Wrench of the City of Norwich. She died 2 February 1726, aged 29 years.[10] He had the following progeny:

Death and burial

He died and was buried on 23 June 1745 at Padstow. His will was dated January 1743, with a codicil dated 12 June 1745.

References

Citations

  1. Forward, Raymond
  2. Biography by National Trust Collections
  3. Burke's, 1936, p.265
  4. Forward, Raymond
  5. Cambridge Alumni Database
  6. Forward, Raymond
  7. Forward, Raymond
  8. Burke's, 1936, p.265
  9. Biography by National Trust Collections
  10. Forward, Raymond
  11. Burke's, 1936, p.265

Sources

  • Forward, Raymond, articles on Edmund Prideaux, The Acorn Archive
  • BBC your paintings website
  • Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, pp. 265–6, pedigree of Prideaux-Brune of Prideaux Place.

Further reading

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