Sir Thomas Charles Bunbury, 6th Bt ('The Steward of the course. Taken on the Race Ground, Brighton')

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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Sir Thomas Charles Bunbury, 6th Bt ('The Steward of the course. Taken on the Race Ground, Brighton')

by and published by Robert Dighton
hand-coloured etching, published December 1802
10 7/8 in. x 7 7/8 in. (276 mm x 200 mm) plate size; 11 1/4 in. x 8 1/4 in. (285 mm x 208 mm) paper size
Given by Henry Witte Martin, 1861
Reference Collection
NPG D10946

Sitterback to top

Artistback to top

  • Robert Dighton (1751-1814), Portrait painter, caricaturist and actor. Artist or producer associated with 320 portraits, Sitter in 4 portraits.

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Events of 1802back to top

Current affairs

After returning from Naples, Nelson tours England with the diplomat and antiquarian Sir William Hamilton and his wife Emma, with whom he was having an affair. With Nelson's status confirmed as a national hero, their reception outrivals that of the King.
Extensive strikes in government shipyards led by John Gast.

Art and science

Francis Jeffrey, MP and arbiter of literary taste, co-founds the Edinburgh Review, the influential Whig quarterly which voiced strong criticism of Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey.
The Exchange, where stocks were traded, is rebuilt to cope with an increase in business during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.

International

Peace of Amiens; Britain finally agrees to unpopular peace, leaving France the chief power in Europe and returning recent British colonial acquisitions.
Napoleon is declared First Consul of the French Empire for life.
English flock to see the international war plunder now on display at the Louvre in Paris.

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