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Matthew 'Monk' Lewis

(1775-1818), Writer, plantation owner and owner of enslaved people

Matthew Gregory ('Monk') Lewis

Regency Portraits Catalogue Entry

Sitter in 3 portraits
Matthew Gregory Lewis was popularly nicknamed 'Monk Lewis' after his work, The Monk (1796), one of the most celebrated British gothic novels. Denounced as blasphemous pornography, it was an immediate bestseller. Capitalising on his success and notoriety, he wrote popular gothic melodramas such as Castle Spectre (1797) and Timour the Tartar (1811), which greatly influenced Sir Walter Scott. In 1812, Lewis inherited a Jamaican sugar plantation. His posthumously published Journal of a West India Proprietor (1834), recounted his attempts to improve the working and living conditions of his slaves. Lewis died of fever on the return voyage from Jamaica.

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Matthew 'Monk' Lewis, by George Lethbridge Saunders, after  Unknown artist - NPG 2171

Matthew 'Monk' Lewis

by George Lethbridge Saunders, after Unknown artist
watercolour on ivory, based on a work from the early 19th century
NPG 2171

Matthew 'Monk' Lewis, by Henry William Pickersgill - NPG 421

Matthew 'Monk' Lewis

by Henry William Pickersgill
oil on canvas, engraved 1809
On display in Room 10 on Floor 3 at the National Portrait Gallery
NPG 421

Matthew 'Monk' Lewis, by J. Hollis, published by  John Samuel Murray, sold by  Charles Tilt, after  George Henry Harlow - NPG D8350

Matthew 'Monk' Lewis

by J. Hollis, published by John Samuel Murray, sold by Charles Tilt, after George Henry Harlow
stipple engraving, published 1834
NPG D8350

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