William Horatio Crawford
The Brotherton Ovid
Incunabula – the first European printed books
The Brotherton Ovid
Condition and binding
Provenance - who owned the books?
Dietrich von Plieningen
Leonhard von Eck
Oswald von Eck
Georg Franz Burkhard Kloss
William Horatio Crawford
Edward Allen Brotherton
Other individuals associated with the books
Sebastian Linck
Philipp Melanchthon
Samuel Leigh Sotheby
J. Alexander Symington
Ovid the poet
The works of Ovid
Medieval and Renaissance reception
The annotations
Heroides
Amores
Art of Love and Cures for Love
Fasti
The drawings
List of illustrations to the Fasti
[Opera] Volume 1
[Opera] Volume 2
[Opera] Volume 3
William Horatio Crawford was born in 1815 in Cork, Ireland.
His father, also named William, co-founded the Beamish and Crawford brewery and later established the Cork School of Art.
William Horatio spent his life working for the family firm (which he took over at the end of the 1850s together with Richard Pigot Beamish) and was the main benefactor of the extension to the Crawford Art Gallery. The extension included several purpose-built galleries and called for the renovation of almost the entire building.
William Horatio, who died a bachelor, was a respected gardener and famous for collecting fine books, art and rare plants.
He inherited Lakelands, his father's house in County Cork, which came with a collection of rare books, paintings and engravings. Following the death of William Horatio in 1888, the house was demolished.
Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge in London sold the library in 1891.