William Rufus Chetwood (Q387423): Difference between revisions

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(‎Added qualifier: Online information (P146): https://dh.dickinson.edu/18cpc/node/3454, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1638027232350)
(‎Created claim: Date of birth (P77): 1700, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1692802886616)
 
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description / frdescription / fr
+ 1766, éditeur anglais
1766, éditeur anglais
Property / Biographical notes
Periodicals etc.: published in Dublin The Meddler, a periodical of essays on European news, satiric prose sketches, poetry, and theatrical advertisements 1744
 
Property / Biographical notes: Periodicals etc.: published in Dublin The Meddler, a periodical of essays on European news, satiric prose sketches, poetry, and theatrical advertisements 1744 / rank
Normal rank
 
Property / Biographical notes: Periodicals etc.: published in Dublin The Meddler, a periodical of essays on European news, satiric prose sketches, poetry, and theatrical advertisements 1744 / reference
 
Property / Biographical notes
Overall: In addition to working at various theaters, Chetwood was a bookseller, novelist, and playwright. His many plays, however, were not very lucrative or acclaimed; his prose fiction was more successful. Throughout the '30s, he declined in prosperity, and the first of a series of dire financial problems arose in 1741, when he became imprisoned in the King's Bench and a performance of William Congreve's The Old Bachelor was advertised as for his benefit. His collection Five New Novels, a piece of hack writing, probably helped secure his release. When in debtor's prison again in Dublin in the 1750s, he wrote poetry and published editions of plays by Henry Shirley (1750) and Ben Jonson (1756) in the hopes of amending his financial difficulties. He was arrested for debt yet again in 1760, prompting another theatrical benefit. He eventually died in prison. The DNB characterizes him as "an active but minor participant in the theatrical and publishing worlds of the first half of the 18th c."
 
Property / Biographical notes: Overall: In addition to working at various theaters, Chetwood was a bookseller, novelist, and playwright. His many plays, however, were not very lucrative or acclaimed; his prose fiction was more successful. Throughout the '30s, he declined in prosperity, and the first of a series of dire financial problems arose in 1741, when he became imprisoned in the King's Bench and a performance of William Congreve's The Old Bachelor was advertised as for his benefit. His collection Five New Novels, a piece of hack writing, probably helped secure his release. When in debtor's prison again in Dublin in the 1750s, he wrote poetry and published editions of plays by Henry Shirley (1750) and Ben Jonson (1756) in the hopes of amending his financial difficulties. He was arrested for debt yet again in 1760, prompting another theatrical benefit. He eventually died in prison. The DNB characterizes him as "an active but minor participant in the theatrical and publishing worlds of the first half of the 18th c." / rank
Normal rank
 
Property / Biographical notes: Overall: In addition to working at various theaters, Chetwood was a bookseller, novelist, and playwright. His many plays, however, were not very lucrative or acclaimed; his prose fiction was more successful. Throughout the '30s, he declined in prosperity, and the first of a series of dire financial problems arose in 1741, when he became imprisoned in the King's Bench and a performance of William Congreve's The Old Bachelor was advertised as for his benefit. His collection Five New Novels, a piece of hack writing, probably helped secure his release. When in debtor's prison again in Dublin in the 1750s, he wrote poetry and published editions of plays by Henry Shirley (1750) and Ben Jonson (1756) in the hopes of amending his financial difficulties. He was arrested for debt yet again in 1760, prompting another theatrical benefit. He eventually died in prison. The DNB characterizes him as "an active but minor participant in the theatrical and publishing worlds of the first half of the 18th c." / reference
 
Property / Family name
 
Property / Family name: Chetwood / rank
 
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Property / Given name(s)
 
Property / Given name(s): William / rank
 
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Property / Given name(s): William / qualifier
 
Position in sequence: 1
Amount1
Unit1
Property / Given name(s)
 
Property / Given name(s): Rufus / rank
 
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Property / Given name(s): Rufus / qualifier
 
Position in sequence: 2
Amount2
Unit1
Property / GND ID
 
Property / GND ID: 120139979 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / Date of birth
 
1700
Timestamp+1700-00-00T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 year
Before0
After0
Property / Date of birth: 1700 / rank
 
Normal rank

Latest revision as of 17:03, 23 August 2023

+ 1766, English publisher
Language Label Description Also known as
English
William Rufus Chetwood
+ 1766, English publisher

    Statements

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    3 March 1766Gregorian
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    Chetwood died on 3 March 1766, probably in a debtors' prison: The Marshalsea, Dublin
    1 reference
    Burling, William J. "Chetwood, William Rufus (d. 1766)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/5247
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    1700
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    Identifiers

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