Home  / LDSAL2022.1.1468

Printing-matrix
Printing-Block
Woodblock

Object number

LDSAL2022.1.1468

Artist/Designer/Maker

Streatfeild, Thomas (Rev.) - Commissioner
Streatfeild, Thomas (Rev.) - Previous Owner

Production date

pre-1836

Material

wood
paper

Technique

Carving
Wood Engraving (Process)

Dimensions

height: 278mm
width: 175mm
depth: 25mm

Location

Burlington House -

Inscriptions

Inscription content

BRASS IN STONE CHURCH (x2)

References

Reference (free text)

Streatfeild, Thomas; Excerpta Cantiana: being the prospecture of a history of Kent; London: 1836.

Reference association

illustrated

Reference note

The image is printed on a sheet of proofs, stored in a compartment in the inner sleeve of the book cover.
    Compound wooden printing block showing:- Obverse: carved and engraved design depicting monumental brass from a stone church in Kent; showing a male religious figure, probably a bishop, wearing a robe, with hands joined together in prayer, inside a border of eight foils with intermittent fleurs-de-lis and arrow-shaped leaves at each point, and a probable Latin inscription; the border extends into a vertical stand with further Latin inscription and from which four additional arrows protrude. Ink residue remaining on surface. Reverse: print of image from the obverse attached to surface.
    One of a large collection of woodblocks and copper plates, commissioned by Rev. Thomas Streatfeild (1777-1848), intended to illustrate an expanded series of Hasted's 'History of Kent'. Only one volume was published, posthumously, 'The Hundred of Blackheath', in 1886; however, a selection of the engravings appear in a prospectus, titled 'Excerptia Cantiana', which was compiled by Streatfeild in 1836, along with several sheets of printed proofs which show all the engravings in printed form. The collection of blocks and plates was donated to the Society in 1890; some of the blocks were illustrated and engraved by Streatfeild himself, but it is not specified which.

    Digitised thanks to the kind donation of Mr Roland Saam.