Catalogue description Phillipps Charters

This record is held by Manchester University: University of Manchester Library

Details of PHC
Reference: PHC
Title: Phillipps Charters
Description:

Assortment of over five hundred charters and other records which once formed part of the collection of Sir Thomas Phillipps, antiquary and bibliophile, at Middle Hill, Broadway in Worcestershire.

 

There are numerous medieval charters and other records relating to religious houses and bishoprics throughout France and Belgium, and deeds relating to secular estates, particularly in Tournai, Senlis, Beauvais, Lisieux, and Bordeaux. The former include papal bulls of Hadrian IV (1157), Clement III (1191), Gregory IX (1236), Alexander IV (1255), Nicholas V (1451), Paul IV (1556) and Gregory XIII (1572), and briefs of Popes Paul V (1616) and Innocent X (1650). Other notable medieval documents are: the settlement for the unrealized marriage of Isabella (1332-79), daughter of Edward III, and Louis, Count of Flanders (1347); compotus rolls from Norfolk (1277-1576); accounts of royal silver mines near Calstock, Cornwall (1317); and royal wardrobe accounts (1313-14).

 

In addition, the collection incorporates many medieval charters, such as grants, quitclaims, agreements, bonds and letters of attorney, for numerous English counties, particularly Derbyshire (especially Ashbourne, Castleton, Swadlincote and Taddington), Durham (Stainton), Huntingdonshire (Stilton), Kent (Charing and Willesborough), Staffordshire (Enville and Whittington), and Yorkshire (Beswick, Lockington and Middleton near Rothwell).

Date: 12th-17th centuries
Related material:

Phillipps's personal papers are located at Oxford University: Bodleian Library, Department of Western Manuscripts

Held by: Manchester University: University of Manchester Library, not available at The National Archives
Language: eng en
Creator:

Phillipps, Sir, Thomas, 1792-1872, 1st baronet, antiquary and bibliophile

Physical description: 0.28 cu.m
Custodial history:

In each entry, the accession number [R-----], the Phillipps press-mark ( ), and any original manuscript numbers [Latin MS. No., French MS. No., English MS. No.] can be found in 'Archival History'

Unpublished finding aids:

Published handlist, Robert Fawtier, Handlist of Charters, Deeds, and Similar Documents in the Possession of the John Rylands Library, vol. 1 (Manchester, 1925).

Administrative / biographical background:

Sir Thomas Phillipps, antiquary and bibliophile, was born at 32 Cannon Street, Manchester on 2 July 1792. He succeeded to the family estates at Broadway, Worcestershire on the death of his father in 1818. Phillipps' interest in books developed at school at Rugby, and later at University College, Oxford. After university, he dedicated himself to the collection of rare books and manuscripts. His particular interest was historical manuscripts, especially those written on vellum. In the early 1820s he visited Belgium, Holland, France, Germany and Switzerland on collecting expeditions. In 1824 he was chief buyer at the sale of the Meerman collection at the Hague, and he also purchased a collection of theological manuscripts from Professor Van Ess of Darmstadt, which were important for the study of medieval German dialects. Phillipps obtained various vellum manuscripts from Belgian monasteries and outbid the Dutch government to purchase the Muschenbroek collection of charters and cartularies in 1827.

 

Phillipps acquired a number of other important collections including the Drury collection, the Lang collection of French romances, the Battlesden library, the Craven Ord and the collection of the Earl of Guilford, rich in Italian manuscripts. He also obtained the Mexican collection of Lord Kingsborough, papers relating to the French Revolution, the Heber collection of early English poetry and French romances and the historical collection of Battle Abbey. In addition, Phillipps had fine collections of Irish, Welsh and Greek manuscripts, together with an impressive series of incunabula.

 

Phillipps was an enthusiastic antiquary, who studied the manuscripts in his collection. In 1819 he privately printed, Collections for Wiltshire, followed by Account of the family of Sir Thomas Molyneux in 1820. He tried to make some of his manuscripts more widely available by establishing a private printing-press in a tower on his Middle Hill estate to produce published editions. He later moved his press to Thirlestane House, Cheltenham in 1862.

 

Phillipps belonged to most of the leading learned societies of his day, although he declined election to the Roxburghe Club on the grounds that it did not publish works of sufficient importance. Phillipps died on 6 February 1872 and was buried at Broadway. His collection was broken up following his death, much of it sold by private treaty or by auctions at Sotheby's (1891-1908). The governments of Germany, Holland and Belgium purchased a number of documents relating to their respective countries.

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