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Samuel Egerton Brydges

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Nationality
  
English

Name
  
Samuel Brydges

Role
  
Bibliographer


Samuel Egerton Brydges

Born
  
30 November 1762 Wootton, Kent (
1762-11-30
)

Occupation
  
bibliographer, genealogist, Member of Parliament for Maidstone from 1812 to 1818

Died
  
September 8, 1837, Geneva, Switzerland

Education
  
Queens' College, Cambridge

People also search for
  
Joseph Haslewood, Edward Quillinan, R. P. Gillies

Books
  
Collins's Peerage of England, Censura literaria, Letters on the Character, The Ruminator, Mary De‑Clifford: a story ; i

Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges, 1st Baronet (30 November 1762 – 8 September 1837) was an English bibliographer and genealogist. He was also Member of Parliament for Maidstone from 1812 to 1818.

Samuel Egerton Brydges Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges 1st Baronet British general

Educated at Maidstone Grammar School and The King's School, Canterbury, Brydges was admitted to Queens' College, Cambridge in 1780, though he did not take a degree. He was called to the bar from the Middle Temple in 1787. He wrote some novels and poems, now forgotten, but rendered valuable service through his bibliographical publications, Censura Literaria, Titles and Opinions of Old English Books (10 vols. 1805-9), his editions of Edward Phillips's Theatrum Poetarum Anglicanorum (1800), Arthur Collins's Peerage of England (1812), and of many rare Elizabethan authors. He was a founding member of the Roxburghe Club, a publishing club of wealthy bibliophiles. He was elected a Knight Grand Commander of the Equestrian, Secular, and Chapterial Order of St. Joachim in 1807, at a Chapter held in Franconia.

In 1789, the Chandos barony became dormant. Egerton Brydges attempted to claim the title, initially on behalf on his older brother Rev. Edward Tymewell Brydges, then later on his own behalf. The litigation continued from 1790 to 1803, before the claims were ultimately rejected, but he continued to style himself per legem terrae Baron Chandos of Sudeley. It seems likely that not only was the claim groundless but that the evidence was forged.

He was made a baronet on 27 December 1814. He died in Geneva.

References

Samuel Egerton Brydges Wikipedia