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© Lennoxlove House Ltd |
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This is a list of 600 paintings belonging to James,
1st Duke of Hamilton. They were packed into 40 cases, with a note
to the effect that there were also '12 cases with 28 of the best
of the statues'. In the 26th packing case was the famous 'Daniel
in the Lions Denne of Reubens'.
This list is undated, but it was probably made
at the end of 1643, just before the duke was imprisoned by Charles
I in Pendennis Castle on suspicion of treason. The duke was one
of a circle of collectors of Old Master paintings, instructing his
brother-in-law, Lord Basil Feilding, to buy up the contents of studios
in Italy for him. It has often been claimed that he had no interest
in pictures himself but purchased them so that he could ingratiate
himself further with Charles I, an ardent collector, by passing
them on to him.
There is ample evidence, however, that the duke
was equally enthusiastic and when he built a new house for himself
at Chelsea in 1639, he installed a large gallery. The present inventory
gives a glimpse of the richness of his collection. It enumerates
paintings by Titian, Raphael, Correggio, Palma Vecchio and Bassano,
almost all showing religious or mythological scenes and also landscapes
and still life pictures. In the same case as the 'Daniel' were Van
Dyck's portraits of the duke himself and his
wife, her father Lord Denbigh
and Mary, Duchess of Richmond (now in the North Carolina Museum
of Art).
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