词条 | Catherina Boevey |
释义 |
Catherina Boevey (1669–1726) (or Bovey, nee Riches) (pronounced "Boovey"[2]), was a philanthropist. OriginsCatherina was born in London in 1669, the daughter of John Riches (1628–1718)[3] by his second wife Anne Davall, whom he had married in 1668, daughter of Thomas Davall, merchant of Amsterdam, by Anna Potts (b.1621, d.pre 1700), the daughter of Thomas (a.k.a. Abraham) Potts. Anna Davall (née Potts) mentions in her will dated 24 December 1688[4] her daughter Anna and her husband John Riches. Catherina's uncle was Sir Thomas Davall, knight, born at Amsterdam in 1644, attended Merchant Taylors' School and was knighted at Kensington Palace 19 June 1713.[5] She had a brother John Riches (dvp.1676) and a sister Anne Riches (d.1689), whose monument exists at Flaxley. "Katharine the Daughter of John & Ann Riches" was baptised on 1 May 1670 at All Hallows Lombard Street, London.[6] Riches was a wealthy merchant originally of Amsterdam who settled in the parish of St Laurence Pountney in London.[7] He was member of the Grocers Company and a Common Councilman of Dowgate (1678–83, 1689) and a Deputy in 1685. He was a Churchwarden of St Laurence Pountney 1680-2. Politically he was assessed as a "good", i.e. reliable, Tory.[8] Her mother is sometimes stated erroneously to have been a daughter of Sir Bernard de Gomme (d.1685), of Holland, Charles II's Military Engineer.[9] De Gomme certainly bequeathed her sister Anna Riches (d.1689) (John Riches' daughter) £300 in his will and supported the denization of Anna Potts (1621-pre 1700), her grandmother, termed in his will "a native of Amsterdam".[10] Appearance and characterCatharina was a great beauty. In The New Atalantis of 1709 by Delarivier Manley[11] she is called Portia, in comparison to the Roman lady who lived 95–45 BC commended for her virtue in a funeral oration by Cicero. She is further described there as "One of those lofty, black, and lasting beauties that strike with reverence and yet delight". Catherine's personal qualities were praised by her contemporaries, Sir Richard Steele included, and her wit and urbanity were noted by Ballard who referred to her as having "great genius and good judgement", derived from her reading.[12] MarriageIn 1684 aged 15 she was married to 17-year-old William Boevey (1667–1692), who in the previous year 1683 had inherited Flaxley Abbey, Gloucestershire, from his first cousin Abraham II Clark (1622–1683)[13] who had died without surviving issue. William was the son of the merchant, lawyer and philosopher James Boevey (1622–1696) by his second wife Isabella de Visscher. Although he lived only to the age of 25, he was given to "excesses, both in debauch and ill-humour," bringing much suffering to his wife; she never complained, however, but supported it all "like a martyr, cheerful under her very sufferings".[14] The short marriage was childless and Catherina remained a widow for the rest of her long life. WidowhoodIn 1692, when Mrs. Boevey was only twenty-two, her husband died, leaving her mistress of his estate of Flaxley[15] and as she was also the sole heiress of her wealthy father,[16] she at once became the centre of a crowd of wooers; Mrs. Bovey would listen to none. Friendship with Mary PopeBy about 1686, aged 17, she had formed a strong friendship with Mrs. Mary Pope, daughter of John Pope, a Bristol merchant.[17] Seeing ample scope for a life of active benefactions, Catherina associated Mrs. Pope with her in her philanthropic career. The modern era has ascribed a possible element of lesbianism into the close friendship between the two women.[18] Philanthropic careerCatherina Boevey distributed to the poor, relieved prisoners, and taught the children of her neighbours. Her gifts, which included the purchase and donation of an estate to augment the income of Flaxley Church,[19] a legacy to Bermuda, and bequests to two schools at Westminster, are listed on her monument in Flaxley Church. Particulars of her habits, and of how she dispensed her charities, appear in H. G. Nicholls's Forest of Dean, pp. 185 et seq. Publicly esteemedIn 1702 George Hickes, in the preface (p. xlvii) to Linguarum Septentrionalium Thesaurus, calls Mrs. Bovey "Angliæ nostræ Hypatia Christiana." In 1714, Steele prefixed an Epistle Dedicatory to her at the start of the second volume of the Ladies' Library. "Do not believe that I have many such as Portia to speak of," wrote the author of The New Atlantis (p. 212); and the repute of her happy ways and generous deeds had not died out in 1807, when Fosbroke in his "History of Gloucestershire"[20] described her as "a very learned, most exemplary, and excellent woman". Death & burialShe died at Flaxley Hall on Saturday, 18 January 1726, and was buried "in a most private manner", according to her own directions (Gent. Mag. lxii. pt. ii. 703). MonumentsPhysicalWestminster AbbeyA now lost monument was erected to Mrs. Bovey in Westminster Abbey, by her friend Mrs. Pope, shortly after her death and survived certainly as late as 1750. Ballard who called it "a beautiful honorary marble monument", wrote to a friend asking him to copy the inscription for him, telling him it was on the north side.[21] It is transcribed in Ballard's Ladies and in John Wilford's Memorials. There is however no mention of the monument or of Mrs. Boevey either in Mackenzie Walcott's Memorials of Westminster, (1851), or in Arthur Penrhyn Stanley's Westminster Abbey, (1882, 5th edition). The text was transcribed by Ralph Bigland in his "Historical, Monumental, and Genealogical Collections relative to the County of Gloucester" (1786–1794):[22]
Appended below was the following memorial to Mary Pope:
Flaxley ChurchOn a large plain tablet of white marble is inscribed the following text:[23]
Also in Flaxley Church is a monument to her sister Anne inscribed:[23]
LiteraryMrs Boevey is widely believed to be the model of Sir Richard Steele "The Peverse Widow" who was wooed by Sir Roger de Coverley, published in The Spectator in 1711.[24][25] Buildings & landscapesBoevy was a close friend of Maynard I Colchester, who lived near Flaxley, and her own canal garden may have influenced the Dutch-style of his Westbury Court Garden.[26] The layout of the gardens and improvements to Flaxley Abbey were continued by her after her husband's death. However, due to the modification of the land, the Dutch-style gardens at Flaxley Abbey were eventually removed. The chapel, dedicated to St. Mary the Virgin, was extended by Mary Pope funded by a bequest in her will. In 1856 the nearby church replaced Boevey's refurbishment of the chapel at the Abbey's gate.[27] Sources{{DNB|wstitle=Bovey, Catharina}}
References1. ^[https://archive.is/20121201100311/http://cybrary.uwinnipeg.ca/people/dobson/GFA/kent_arms_1530-1592.pdf An index to the arms in The Visitations of Kent..., 2 vols., W. Bruce Bannerman (ed.), (Harleian Society, vols. 74 & 75, 1923–1924) by John Blythe Dobson] {{DEFAULTSORT:Bovey, Catharina}}2. ^Debrett's Peerage, 1968, Crawley-Boevey baronets, p.89 3. ^DNB 1900, citing Wilford, Memorials of Eminent Persons, p. 746, Epitaph 4. ^TheGenealogist.co.uk, quoted in Foulds Family Tree RootsWeb 5. ^A Register of the Scholars Admitted into Merchant Taylor's School from AD 1562 to 1874 6. ^ancestry.com 7. ^Agnew, p.79 8. ^RICHES, John Co Co Dowgate, 1678–83, 1689, Dep, 1685 Lawrence Pountney Lane, 1677, St Lawrence Pountney, 1668, ChW, 1680-2 (1) GR (2) Living, 1706 (3) mar 1668, Anne Davall (4) Merchant (5) Tory ('good", 1682) (6)(1) Directory, 1677, Boyd 40142, H B Wilson, A History of the Parish of St Lawrence Pountney (1831), p 114 (2) H B Wilson, op cit, p 139 (3) H B Wilson, op cit, p 141 (4) Boyd 40142 (5) Directory, 1677, SP/29/418/199 (6) SP/29/418/199. From: Woodhead J.R., The Rulers of London 1660–1689: A biographical record of the Aldermen and Common Councilment of the City of London, 1966, pp. 134–143 9. ^DNB (Notes and Queries, 2nd ser. ix. 221-2) 10. ^Saunders, A.D. Fortres Builder: Bernard de Gomme, Charles II's Military Enguineer, 2004 11. ^New Atlantis iii. 208 et seq. 12. ^{{cite book|last1=Williams|first1=Carolyn D.|last2=Escott|first2=Angela|last3=Duckling|first3=Louise|title=Woman to Woman: Female Negotiations During the Long Eighteenth Century|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=THa6YZR_1dAC&pg=PA101|accessdate=15 October 2010|year=2010|publisher=University of Delaware Press|isbn=978-0-87413-088-1|page=10|chapter=A Woman of Extraordinary Merit: Catherine Bovey of Flaxley Abbey, Gloucestershire. by Jessica Munns and Penny Richards}} 13. ^Dates per his monument at Flaxley Church 14. ^The New Atlantis of 1736 (iii. 208 et seq.) 15. ^DNB (Magna Britannia, 1720, ii. 834) 16. ^DNB (Ballard, British Ladies, p. 439) 17. ^Mary Pope's father named on Catherina's monument in Westminster Abbey 18. ^{{cite book|last=Traub|first=Valerie|title=The renaissance of lesbianism in early modern England|series=Volume 42 of Cambridge studies in Renaissance literature and culture|year=2002|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge, UK|isbn=0-521-44885-9|pages=72 et seq|chapter=Setting the stage behind the seen}} 19. ^{{cite book|last=Rudge|first=Thomas|authorlink=Thomas Rudge|title=The History of the County of Gloucester: compressed and brought down to the year 1803|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mQA-AAAAcAAJ|accessdate=16 October 2010|volume=2|year=1803|publisher=Harris|page=97}} 20. ^Gloucestershire, p. 179 21. ^Nichols, Lit. Illustr. iv. 223 22. ^[https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:7aNAX9SxevwJ:www.forest-of-dean.net/downloads/Bigland_Transcripts/Flaxley_Bigland_Transcripts.pdf+on+a+large+plain+tablet+of+white+marble+in+the+vault&hl=en&gl=uk&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESjXtmZ3--yPMjD3kR3mzsMf737wmjcxmA_mKZxCeXerJOIrKRHGyG_vi94AqU7nOzMNqeaRxvUWi-vvq1YzNl7aYcsdNL6xcVF9xGQrkX-FToGMOTnEyoshV8ZXkWp76f-1ANQD&sig=AHIEtbT2yZ_AJANXPM9giPnet2EqDMa4Xw Transcribed by Bigland, History of Gloucestershire] 23. ^1 Transcribed by Bigland, History of Gloucestershire 24. ^DNB (Gent. Mag. lxii. pt. ii. 703) 25. ^{{cite DNB|wstitle=Bovey, Catharina|last=Humphreys|first=Jennett|authorlink=Jennett Humphreys|volume=06|quote=[Wilford's Memorials of Eminent Persons, pp. 745, 746; Notes and Queries, 2nd ser. ix. 221-2; Nicholls's Forest of Dean, pp. 185 et seq.; The New Atlantis, ed. 1736, iii. 208 et seq.; Fosbroke's Gloucestershire, 1807, ii. 177 et seq.; Ballard's British Ladies, 437 et seq.; Steele's Ladies' Library, Preface, 1714; Gent. Mag. 1792, lxii. pt. ii. 703.]}} 26. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.gardens-guide.com/gardenpages/_0403.htm|title=Westbury Court Garden (Gloucestershire)|work=OPEN GARDENS UK & Ireland|publisher=Gardens-Guide.com|accessdate=16 October 2010}} 27. ^'Flaxley', A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 5: Bledisloe Hundred, St. Briavels Hundred, The Forest of Dean (1996), pp. 138–150. Date accessed: 16 October 2010. 4 : 1669 births|1726 deaths|English philanthropists|People from London |
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