Philip Yorke (antiquary)
Philip Yorke | |
---|---|
Born |
"Erddig Hall," Denbighshire, Wales | 30 July 1743
Died |
19 March 1804 "Erddig Hall," Denbighshire, Wales |
Resting place | Church of St. Deiniol and St. Marcella, Marchwiel, Denbighshire, Wales |
Language | English |
Genre | Welsh genealogical history |
Notable works | The Royal Tribes of Wales (1799) |
Spouse | Elizabeth Cust (d. 1779) and Diana Wynne (d. 1805) |
Children |
Simon Yorke (1771–1834) |
Relatives | Simon and Dorothy Yorke (parents); Philip Yorke, first earl of Hardwicke |
Philip Yorke (1743–1804) was an antiquary who developed a great interest in Welsh history and genealogy relatively late in his life. He is the author of The Royal Tribes of Wales (1799).
Background
The son of Simon Yorke (1696–1767) and Dorothy Hutton (1717–1787), he was born at Erddig, not far from Wrexham (Denbighshire, Wales). He was related to Philip Yorke, first earl of Hardwicke, who was uncle to Simon's father Simon Yorke. His mother, Dorothy, was a daughter of Matthew Hutton of Newnham, Hertfordshire. After receiving his basic education in Wanstead and at Newcome's School in Hackney,[1] he went to Eton College and subsequently in 1762 to Benet College, Cambridge, where he was awarded an MA degree in 1765.[2] He proceeded to Lincoln's Inn in 1762 and was 'called to the bar' in 1767. He took great delight in classical literature and became a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1768.
Marriages and career
In 1770, Philip married his first wife Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Cust, and he had 2 daughters and 5 sons with her. Through his wife's aid he became a member of parliament and served in this capacity for the borough of Helston, Cornwall, until 1781. Elizabeth died two years previously (1779).
In 1782, Philip married his second wife, the Welsh widow Diana (d. 1805), who was a daughter of Piers Wynne of Dyffryn Aled. They had 2 daughters and 4 sons. Yorke later obtained a seat in parliament for Grantham but after a year relinquished it to his eldest son Simon (1792–93).
The marriage sparked in him a growing interest for Welsh history and genealogy, a subject for which he formerly cared very little. He began to take a keen interest in the ancestors of his wife, a descendant of Marchudd ap Cynan, lord of Uwch Dulas and said that he had come to "think the race of Cadwallon more glorious than the breed of Gimcrack", as he wrote in his Tracts of Powys. This was his first book on Welsh history and genealogy, which was published in 1795. He is known above all for writing a considerably longer work, The Royal Tribes of Wales, published in 1799 (see below).
Yorke died in 1804, followed by his wife Diana in 1805. His public performances in high-level politics are said to have been rather restrained and according to C. J. Apperley, he was "one of the worst-dressed men in the country" as well as an incompetent horseman. He was nevertheless a noted conversationalist and storyteller and achieved a measure of fame for his performances as an amateur actor at the Wynnstay Theatre.
Death and burial
A memorial inscription to him in the Church of St. Deiniol and St. Marcella in Marchwiel, Denbighshire, Wales, states:
In memory of PHILIP YORKE of Erthig, Efqre. whofe integrity of heart, fuavity of manners, and intellectual endowments, whilft they endeared him to fociety, were to his own breaft a perpetual fource of peace, complacency, and fatisfaction. He died on 19 February 1804, in the 61st year of his age.
Go gentle Spirit, and from Heav'n receive That high reward which Heav'n alone can give! With confciousnefs of years well-Spent depart, Waiting His mercy ... can Search the heart.
Works
His first genealogical book, the Tracts of Powys, was published in 1795, with 70 copies in print. Dedicated to Thomas Pennant of Downing, it was based on a limited range of printed sources as well as on correspondences with scholars such as Walter Davies. The work details the history of the descendants of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, offers a stern critique against Polydore Vergil's negative appraisal of the early Britons and devotes some space to the crown lordships of Powys. The appendix includes letters by Goronwy Owen and Lewis Morris.
The Tracts of Powys formed the basis for a considerably larger and much better known work, his The Royal Tribes of Wales, which was published in 1799. It was written with some help from Walter Davies and set out to give an account of the so-called 'Five Royal Tribes of Wales' and the noble pedigrees which sprang from them. Yorke was initially sympathetic to the origin myth of the Welsh people, including the traditions which traced its descent from Trojan forebears, but later rejected such theories.
Yorke also worked on a history of 'the Fifteen Common Tribes of Wales', but never lived to complete it.
References
- ↑ Evans, Dylan Foster. "Yorke, Philip". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/30247. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ↑ "Yorke, Philip (YRK762P)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Yorke, Philip (1799). The Royal Tribes of Wales. Wrexham.
- Yorke, Philip (1887) [1799]. R. Williams, ed. The Royal Tribes of Wales. To which is Added an Account of The Fifteen Tribes of North Wales. With Numerous Additions and Notes, Preface and Index (2nd ed.). Liverpool.
- Seccombe, Thomas; Dylan Foster Evans (2004). "Yorke, Philip (1743–1804)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 31 August 2010. The first edition of this text is available as an article on Wikisource: "Yorke, Philip (1743-1804)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- "Yorke, Philip (1743–1804)". Welsh Biography online. The National Library of Wales. 2009. Retrieved 31 August 2010.
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