Charlotte Duncombe (née Legge), Lady Feversham

1 portrait by James Holmes

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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Charlotte Duncombe (née Legge), Lady Feversham

by Richard James Lane, after James Holmes
lithograph, 1849
8 1/2 in. x 6 3/8 in. (215 mm x 162 mm) paper size
Given by Austin Lane Poole, 1956
Reference Collection
NPG D21718

Sitterback to top

Artistsback to top

  • James Holmes (1777-1860), Miniature painter. Artist or producer associated with 23 portraits.
  • Richard James Lane (1800-1872), Sculptor and lithographer. Artist or producer associated with 1226 portraits, Sitter in 6 portraits.

Related worksback to top

  • NPG D22215: Charlotte Duncombe (née Legge), Lady Feversham (from same plate)

Events of 1849back to top

Current affairs

Benjamin Disraeli becomes Conservative leader in the House of Commons.
Bedford College for Women is founded, following on from the foundation of Queen's College for Women the previous year.
Henry Mayhew, the social researcher and reform advocate, begins publishing his extensive statistical survey into the living conditions of urban communities, London Labour and the London Poor in the Morning Chronicle.

Art and science

With the death of his father Johann Strauss the Elder, Johann Baptist Strauss, the Austrian violinist and composer combines his and his father's orchestra, becoming known as 'the Waltz King'. His famous waltzes include The Blue Danube (1867). Dante Gabriel Rossetti paints his sister, the poet Christina, in The Girlhood of Mary Virgin.

International

Rome is briefly proclaimed a republic after the papal states are overthrown by Italian republicans. Napoleon's dependency on French Catholics leads him however to help restore papal authority. The restoration of Austrian military rule in Italy further darkens hopes of a self-ruling Italian nationhood.
Communist riots are suppressed in Paris.

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