MRS JAMES GREEN, NEE MARY BYRNE (BRITISH, 1776-1845)
Property of an Estate
MRS JAMES GREEN, NEE MARY BYRNE (BRITISH, 1776-1845)

Details
MRS JAMES GREEN, NEE MARY BYRNE (BRITISH, 1776-1845)
A pair of portraits: The Rev. Dr Nevil Maskelyne (1732-1811), in black scholar's robes, red curtain background; together with his wife, Sophia Rose, in burnt orange dress with white Swiss muslin fichu and headscarf, wearing pearls and a portrait miniature of her husband around her neck
both signed 'M Byrne' (lower right)
ovals, 2 1/8 in. (77 mm.) and 2¾ in. (70 mm.) high, respectively, gilt-metal frames, the former with translucent blue glass on foil ground, the latter with gold intials on plaited hair; each in fitted red leather case with silk lining (4)

Brought to you by

Tom Johans
Tom Johans

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

The Rev. Dr Nevil Maskelyne was the fifth English Astronomer Royal, an office he held for over forty years. As a young man, the eclipse of 25 July 1748 ignited an interest in astronomy and Maskelyne went on to study mathematics at St Catherine's College, Cambridge. He was ordained as a minister in 1755 and became a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge the following year. In 1758 he was admited to the Royal Society and set about developing a method of determing longitude using the position of the moon. The overall aim was to accurately calculate the Earth's distance from the sun thus establishing a better understanding of the scale of the solar system. Maskelyne was appointed Astronomer Royal in 1765 and his primary task was to observe the moon and his findings were published through the Royal Society. He was elected to the council of the Royal Society in 1766 and conducted various experiments on its behalf, including one to measure the earth's density for which he won the society's highest award, the Copley medal, in 1774.
Maskelyne married Sophia Rose (1752-1821) of Cotterstock, Northamptonshire, in around 1765 and they had a daughter, Margaret (1786-1858). The portrait miniature worn by Sophia Rose is identical to the one of her husband in the present lot.
For further information about the life and work of The Rev. Dr Nevil Maskelyne, see D. Howse, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online version, 2009.

More from Centuries of Style: Silver, European Ceramics, Portrait Miniatures and Gold Boxes

View All
View All