French painter and lithographer.
Renowned for his amorous escapades and as the founder in 1819 of the ‘four-in-hand club’ and leader of the Badminton and Windsor hunts.
British engraver and charter member of the Artists' Benevolent Fund, involved in the creation of a mutual assurance society for artists who were not members of the Royal Academy.
British engraver.
Writer of novels and non-fiction.
English engraver. Pupil of the celebrated mezzotint engraver Samuel William Reynolds (1773–1835).
British politician.
Founder of the Royal Academy of Music, London in 1823.
John Bull was a fictitious embodiment of Englishness and British imperialism.
Philanthropist and wife of Lord Byron.
Linnell had a long and very successful career as an artist, but modern assessments of his importance centre on his early work, and on his relationships with his fellow artists William Blake and Samuel Palmer, who became his son-in-law in 1837.
Courtier and vicereine of India.
Line, stipple and mezzotint engraver who worked in London.
Portrait engraver in London. Brother of William Holl the younger (1807-1871). Later emigrated to USA.
Maurice Platnauer was Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford, from 1956 to 1960. He was educated at Shrewsbury School and New College, Oxford. A classicist, he was a master at Winchester College from 1910 to 1915. During World War One he was an officer with the Royal Garrison Artillery and met up with George Mallory. In 1922 he became a Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford. He was Vice-Principal of Brasenose from 1936 to 1956; and Editor of the Classical Quarterly from 1936 to 1947; and an Honorary Fellow of New College from 1957.
Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph (1851–1940), physicist
Elizabeth Van de Weyer (née Bates) was from Massachusetts and the only daughter Joshua Bates (1788-1864) of Barings Bank. She comforted Queen Victoria following the death of Prince Albert.