Jane Baillie Carlyle (née Welsh)
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- Extended Catalogue Entry
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Jane Baillie Carlyle (née Welsh)
by Samuel Laurence
oil on canvas, circa 1852
7 7/8 in. x 6 in. (200 mm x 152 mm)
Given by John Barton Sterling, 1898
Primary Collection
NPG 1175
Sitterback to top
- Jane Baillie Carlyle (née Welsh) (1801-1866), Letter writer; wife of Thomas Carlyle. Sitter in 12 portraits.
Artistback to top
- Samuel Laurence (1812-1884), Portrait painter. Artist or producer associated with 40 portraits, Sitter in 4 portraits.
Linked publicationsback to top
- Smartify image discovery app
- Lucinda Hawksley, Charles Dickens and his Circle, 2016, p. 52
- Ormond, Richard, Early Victorian Portraits, 1973, p. 86
- Saywell, David; Simon, Jacob, Complete Illustrated Catalogue, 2004, p. 103
Events of 1852back to top
Current affairs
The Peelites, a breakaway group who had supported Peel during the Corn Law reforms, join the Liberals. The Conservative Edward Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, becomes Prime Minister after Lord John Russell's Liberal administration collapses. The administration is short-lived and replaced by a new Liberal-Peelite coalition, under the leadership of former Tory George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen.Art and science
Start of spiritualism craze in England.London physician Peter Mark Roget first publishes his thesaurus.
American author Harriet Beecher Stowe publishes the hugely successful anti-slavery novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin
Scottish physicist William Thomson formulates the second law of thermodynamics, demonstrating that a rapidly expanding gas cools.
International
Independent Boer republics north of the Vaal and Orange rivers are recognised by Britain following the Sand River Convention. Later, the Bloemfontein Convention (1854) formally recognises the independence of Boer republics between the Vaal and Orange rivers, resulting in the Boer Republic of the Orange Free State.Tension escalates in Crimea as France demands that Turkey end Russia's exclusive control of the Christian Holy Places in the Ottoman empire.
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