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The Jernegan–Arundell Correspondence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2012

Natalie Walters
Affiliation:
Natalie Walters, BA, MA, Archivist, Department of Archives and Manuscripts, Wellcome Library, 183 Euston Road, London, NW1 2BE.
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Abstract

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Type
Illustrations from the Wellcome Library
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2009. Published by Cambridge University Press

References

1Wellcome Library (hereafter WL), MS.8463/4–6.

2Cornwall Record Office (hereafter CRO), AR.

3Sir Bernard Burke, Burke's genealogical and heraldic history of the peerage, baronetage and knightage, Privy Council, and order of precedence, 96th ed., London, Shaw, 1938, p. 159.

4L G Pine, The new extinct peerage, 1884–1971: containing extinct, abeyant, dormant, and suspended peerages with genealogies and arms, London, Heraldry Today, 1972, p. 12.

5CRO, AR/21/42/1.

6The Jernegan family seat was at Costessey, Norfolk, and the Norfolk Record Office holds most of the family papers in the Jerningham Collection. Additional material relating to the family can be found in a number of other English archives, most notably Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent Archive Service, Staffordshire Record Office (hereafter SRO), D641, DW1721/1/1-12 and D1810.

7CRO, AR/19/50–52.

8SRO, D641/3/B/1/7.

9WL, MS.8463/9.

10WL, MS.8463/8.

11CRO, AR/21/50.

12WL, MS.8463/13.

13WL, MS.8463/3.

14WL, MS.8463/1.

15WL, MS.8463/10.

16WL, MS.8463/11.

17WL, MS.8463/4.

18Ibid; WL, MS.8463/6.

19WL, MS.8463/4.

20WL, MS.8463/5.

21WL, MS.8463/12.

22WL, MS.8463/14.

23CRO, AR/25/68, 70.

24Isobel Grundy, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu: comet of the Enlightenment, Oxford University Press, 1999, pp. 162, 210.

25Ian and Jenifer Glyn, The life and death of smallpox, London, Profile Books, 2004, pp. 4–5.

26Ibid., p. 2.

27Joseph Gillow, A literary and biographical history, or bibliographical dictionary, of the English Catholics: from the breach with Rome, in 1534, to the present time, London, Burns & Oates, 1885–1902, vol. 3, p. 624.

28L W B Brockliss, French higher education in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries: a cultural history, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1987, p. 14.

29Olaf Pedersen, ‘Tradition and innovation’, in Hilde de Ridder-Symoens (ed.), A history of the university in Europe, vol. 2, Universities in early modern Europe (1500–1800), Cambridge University Press, 1996, pp. 451–88, 452.

30Brockliss, op. cit., note 28 above, p. 391.

31Laurence Brockliss and Colin Jones, The medical world of early modern France, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1997, p. 98.

32Brockliss, op. cit., note 28 above, pp. 392–3.

33Brockliss and Jones, op. cit., note 31 above, p. 94.

34Brockliss, op. cit., note 28 above, pp. 392, 397–8.

35Ibid., p. 395.

36A G Chevalier, ‘Medical teaching at Montpellier’, Ciba Symposia, April 1940, 2 (1): 408–11, on p. 411.

37Gillow, op. cit., note 27 above, p. 624.

38WL, MS.8463/9.

39Louis Dulieu, ‘Pierre Chirac, sa vie, ses écrits, ses idées’, Montpellier Médical, 1957, 3: 767–86, pp. 768–71.

40Louis Dulieu, La me´decine à Montpellier, vol. 3, L'Époque classique, [Avignon], Presses Universelles, 1975, p. 752.

41WL, MS.8463/11.

42Ibid.

43WL, MS.8463/9.

44WL, MS.8463/8.

45Ibid.

46Gillow, op. cit., note 27 above, p. 624; Sir Bernard Burke and Ashworth P Burke, A genealogical and heraldic history of the peerage and baronetage, the Privy Council, knightage and companionage, 77th ed., London, Harrison, 1915, p. 1111.

47WL, MS.8463/3.