The Life and Labours in Art and Archaeology, of George Petrie (Cambridge Library Collection - Archaeology)

Cambridge Library Collection
The Life and Labours in Art and Archaeology, of George Petrie (Cambridge Library Collection - Archaeology)

The antiquary and artist George Petrie (1790-1866) was one of the founding fathers of Irish archaeology. Having trained since childhood with his painter father, he began to travel around the country, sketching landscapes, monuments and ruins. He later worked for the Royal Irish Academy, and then for the Ordnance Survey, organising the publication of essays on the historical monuments it mapped. His interests extended from architecture and ecclesiastical history to ancient music and Irish wolfhounds, and he was at the forefront of efforts to preserve endangered historic buildings. In particular, his studies of the round towers of Ireland successfully demolished many myths about their building and purpose. This biography, published in 1868, was written by his friend and companion on many antiquarian expeditions, William Stokes (1804-78), the distinguished physician who was one of the first to introduce Laennec's stethoscope into the British Isles.

Publisher: Cambridge Library Collection

Published: United Kingdom, 1 November 2014

Format: Paperback, 468 pages

Age Range: 15+

Dimensions: 21.6 x 14 x 2.6 centimeters (0.61 kg)

Writer: William Stokes

Table of ContentsPreface; 1. George Petrie's birth and early life; 2. Extracts from tours; 3. First literary works; 4. The Ordnance Survey memoir; 5. The history band antiquities of Tara Hill; 6. The round towers, and early Christian architecture of Ireland; 7. The military and sepulchral architecture of Ireland; 8. Ancient art in Ireland; 9. Ancient music of Ireland; 10. Later tours of Petrie; 11. Closing years; Appendix.

Promotional InformationThis 1868 biography of George Petrie, a founding father of Irish archaeology, was published by his friend William Stokes.