The Correspondence of William Stukeley and Maurice Johnson, 1714-1754
Title Details

342 Pages

23.4 x 15.6 cm

21 b/w illus.

Series: Publications of the Lincoln Record Society

Series Vol. Number: 104

Imprint: Lincoln Record Society

The Correspondence of William Stukeley and Maurice Johnson, 1714-1754

Edited by Diana Honeybone and Michael Honeybone

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  • Contents
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Edition of the correspondence of the notable antiquarians William Stukeley and Maurice Johnson, presenting vivid details of life at the time.

Both sides of a correspondence, stretching over forty years, between two remarkable Lincolnshire friends, the antiquaries William Stukeley (1687-1765) and Maurice Johnson (1688-1755), are brought together in this volume. Beginningwhen the writers were in their twenties, the letters cover Johnson's work as a lawyer and the development of his cherished Spalding Gentlemen's Society, and Stukeley's career as a physician, his ordination in 1729, and eventual return to London in 1747. The two friends wrote on a wide range of topics, including current affairs, political scandals, financial disasters like the South Sea Bubble and the threat of Jacobite invasions. The letters reflect cultural life: the founding of the British Museum, operatic performances, the activities of the Royal Society and Society of Antiquaries. They portray life in South Lincolnshire: local elections, concerts, race meetings and plays. Local gossip reveals a parade of characters, marrying for love or money, building houses, and encountering alarming accidents. Naturally, the letters also illustrate the lives of the two friends, their financial concerns, their marriages, children and pets, their friendships, difficulties with neighbours and all the minutiæ of small-town Lincolnshire life. Above all, the two men shared their passion for the study of antiquity and their enthusiasm for spreadingknowledge as widely as possible, particularly through the learned societies founded during this period.
The letters are presented with explanatory notes and a full introduction.

Diana Honeybone and Michael Honeybone taught history for the Open University and Nottingham University Department of Adult Education. They have spent many years studying and teaching the local history of the East Midlands, with special emphasis on intellectual activity in the eighteenth century.
Introduction
The correspondence of Maurice Johnson and William Stukeley, 1714-1754
Additional letters
Appendix 1: Two dissertations on Lincolnshire topics by William Stukeley
Appendix 2: Johnson-Stukeley correspondence: chronological order of letters
Appendix 3: People referred to in the letters who were members of the Spalding Gentlemen's Society
Appendix 4: Contemporary tributes to Johnson and Stukeley
"A broad cross-section of eighteenth century European society unveils before one's eyes, bringing the modern reader into the feelings and emotions that inspired some of the most intriguing intellectual debates of the age of Enlightenment." ARCHIVES
"Diana and Michael Honeybone have written a book which will fascinate readers and provide many Lincolnshire insights and surprises." LINCOLNSHIRE NATURALISTS' UNION

Hardcover

9780901503985

September 2014

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Title Details

342 Pages

2.34 x 1.56 cm

21 b/w illus.

Series: Publications of the Lincoln Record Society

Series Vol. Number: 104

Imprint: Lincoln Record Society