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Letter 0669

John Ray to Hans Sloane – February 19, 1700/01


Item info

Date: February 19, 1700/01
Author: John Ray
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 135-136



Original Page



Transcription

Ray asks Sloane to thank Preston for him. He informs Sloane that he has completed his Methods, but believes that no bookseller will be interested. Dr Robinson’s letter informed Ray that recent losses have made booksellers wary. Ray was a theologian and naturalist who collected and catalogued his botanical findings in the much lauded Historia plantarum (1686, 1688) (Scott Mandelbrote, Ray , John (16271705), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2005 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/23203, accessed 18 June 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 3414

Hans Sloane to Étienne François Geoffroy – Oct. 20. 1709


Item info

Date: Oct. 20. 1709
Author: Hans Sloane
Recipient: Étienne François Geoffroy

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4068
Folio: f. 53



Original Page



Transcription

Monsieur Londres Oct. 20. 1709. S.V. Je vous ai envoyé par Mr. Mangold de Bortes un pacquet ou il y a des livres pour vous es pour Mr. l’Abbé Bignon. Il m’a promis de vous l’envoyer de Hollande au plutot es comme il partis d’ici il y a quelques Semaines, j’espere que vous le recevrez aussitos que cette lettre. Il y a des desseins de Persepolis es de Penses que j’ai fait copier sur les originaux que j’ai dans mon cabines es que je vous prie de presenter de ma part a Mr. l’Abbe Bignon votre illustre presidens avec les Catalogues de Nouveau Livres es les Livres de Mr.s Lister es Pitcairn. Pour vous, Monsr je vous prie d’accepter le livre de Mr. Hauksbee de nouvelles experiences sur diverses Matieres avec les Transactions philosophique publiées depuis que je vous enverrai d’autres choses par la premieres occasion. Je vous prie de donner a Mr. Cassini le fils un autre Exemplaires de ces messiers[?] Transactions où il trouvera peutetre quelque chose de Mathematique qui lui plaira j’ai conserve une grand estime pour lui, depuis que j’ai eu l’honneur de le connaitre ici, es j’ai dessein[?] de les lui envoyer de temps entemps. vous m’obligerez de me mander quelles Sons les transaction qui peuvens vous manquer, afin que je puisse vous les envoyer aussi bien que les autres[?] livres dons vous pourrez avoir onira.[?] Je vous rends grecy[?] des memoires de 1707 que j’ai receu par Mr. Mangold avec votre lettre es vos belle es Surprenan Experiences que vous avez Sur les metaux par le Verre ardeur. J’ai receu le tous un peu tard acause que Mr. Mangold a cité longtemps en Hollande Pour la preparation de l’Acier des indes Orientales et que l’on employe la comme un remede, c’est la poudre d’acier tres fine, es pour ce qui es de l’acier usages, Honnere remarque qu’au temps de la Guerre de Troye on le Servoir de la rouillure des armes, comme l’observe Mr. LeClerc dans son Histoire de la Medecine. Pour l’Arbestus que je vous ai envoyé, il venais du Nord d’Ecosse, ou on le trouve de la maniere que vous le voyez Sous le gazon, ou Sur la Surface de la terres parmi les fibres de Gramina qui croissent au dessus. Je vous ai envoyé ces échantillon a cause que ce qu’on trouve au païs de Galles es dans l’isle de Crete se trouve dans les fentes ou fissure des rochers. On la file en Ecosse en la meslans[?] avec quelques fibre de chancre ou de lin lesquels se consumer la premiere fois qu’on le mes au feu Sans endomager le fil de l’arbestus. Sans doute que vous avez veu un petit traitté de l’Amianthee ecrir par Sigr. Campini imprime a Rome. Je vous pris de rendre a lettre cy jointe a Monsr. L’abbe Bignon & de me croire avec beaucoup du finerit.[?] Votre trop humble & tres obeisant Serviteur, Hans Sloane




Patient Details

An Invitation to View a ‘Monster’

Amidst Sloane’s letters is a handwritten advertisement:

An admirable Curiosity of Nature being a Surprising Instance of a monstrous and preternatural birth lately in France to Children Joyned together in the Body. With Two Backs one Breast one Heart and Two Entrails one Head and Two faces Three Tongues in one mouth. The Bodies having their Proper Members so that Monster has Four arms and Four hands on which are sixteen Fingers and Four Thumbs Four Thighs Four legs and Feet and Toes proportionable with perfect nails on both Toes and Fingers. It being at full birth and lived the Space of Four Days. This wonderful curiosity may be brought to any gentleman’s House.

It is an intriguing note, lacking an author’s name or date. But it makes me wonder: did Sloane arrange to view this curiosity?

There are several accounts of unusual births—severely deformed children or animals—in Sloane’s correspondence, some of which appear in the Philosophical Transactions. Monstrous births were a source of great fascination to early modern people; besides being the subject of many treatises and pamphlets, such curiosities were regularly exhibited (for a fee) across Europe.

Nicolaus Tulpius, Conjoined twins (1652).
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images

The term ‘monster’ comes from Latin, meaning portent or warning. And this was how many people understood them—as a message from God that indicated the mother’s sins or served to caution the wider community about its morals. Other people were simply curious and wanted entertainment, keen to pay the money to see something so unusual. Natural philosophers such as Sloane, however, wanted to understand why such births occurred. Perhaps they were part of the natural world after all, just a matter of excess, or one of God’s secrets placed in nature for man to uncover. But first, natural philosophers needed to distinguish the real from the fake. Given the possibilities of profit and fame, trickery was certainly possible.

Sloane did not indicate that he saw the curiosity. He was a busy man and probably would have relied on word of mouth to decide whether or not it was worth his while to view it. Nonetheless, it is interesting that he bothered to keep the invitation at all. It is arguable that this was simply a random scrap of paper that was caught up in his papers, but I think it is more likely that the invitation acted as a memory device, either to recall that a particular curiosity had come to London or that it was one he had seen. Most significant of all, however, is that he never printed an account by anyone in the Philosophical Transactions that matches the description of this curiosity.

Not all monsters, apparently, were interesting—either as a hoax or medical case!

Letter 0344

Peter Barwick to Hans Sloane – July 10, 1690


Item info

Date: July 10, 1690
Author: Peter Barwick
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4036
Folio: f. 88



Original Page



Transcription

Peter Barwick (1619-1705) was a physician. He served Charles II in 1651 and was censor of the College of Physicians in 1674, 1684, and 1687. Sir Hans Sloane was one of the executors of Barwick’s will (Peter Elmer, ‘Barwick, Peter (1619–1705)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/1614, accessed 9 July 2014]).




Patient Details

Letter 0327

Peter Barwick to Hans Sloane – June 27, 1690


Item info

Date: June 27, 1690
Author: Peter Barwick
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4036
Folio: ff. 85-86



Original Page



Transcription

Barwick is having some difficulty in his College, which is keeping him away. Peter Barwick (1619-1705) was a physician. He served Charles II in 1651 and was censor of the College of Physicians in 1674, 1684, and 1687. Sir Hans Sloane was one of the executors of Barwick’s will (Peter Elmer, ‘Barwick, Peter (1619–1705)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/1614, accessed 9 July 2014]).




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: Lady Elizabeth Monck (nee Cavendish), Duchess of Abemarle
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description

    [Lady Elizabeth Cavendish, b. 1654, d. 1734. Later married Ralph Montague, Duke of Montague. Cokayne, Complete Peerage, vol. 1, p. 90.] Had 'a strong vomit in her stomach'.

  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Her stomach felt better after 'ye Oatmeal'.


    Ongoing Treatment:
    Response:

    Lady Albemarle not improving despite treatment; her condition was just as bad as it was after previous treatments. These previous treatments include emetic wine. Barwick would like the Duchess to be given ten ounces of 'mere. vitae', and asks Sloane to let him know the results.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Stomach

Letter 0671

Thomas Molyneux to Hans Sloane – February 22, 1700/01


Item info

Date: February 22, 1700/01
Author: Thomas Molyneux
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 140-141



Original Page



Transcription

Molyneux thanks Sloane for the Philosophical Transactions, but wishes to complete his set. He provides a list of the issue he possesses. Molyneux believes his contributions to the Royal Society are valued and will do more in future. Thomas Molyneux was a physician and natural philosopher who corresponded with Sloane, Edward Lhuyd, and John Locke (J. B. Lyons, Molyneux, Sir Thomas, first baronet (16611733), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Sept 2010 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/18927, accessed 4 July 2011]).




Patient Details

Letter 0352

Peter Barwick to Hans Sloane – July 10, 1690


Item info

Date: July 10, 1690
Author: Peter Barwick
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4036
Folio: f. 88



Original Page



Transcription

Peter Barwick (1619-1705) was a physician. He served Charles II in 1651 and was censor of the College of Physicians in 1674, 1684, and 1687. Sir Hans Sloane was one of the executors of Barwick’s will (Peter Elmer, ‘Barwick, Peter (1619–1705)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/1614, accessed 9 July 2014]).




Patient Details

Letter 0605

William Sherard to Hans Sloane – September 13, 1699


Item info

Date: September 13, 1699
Author: William Sherard
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4037
Folio: ff. 328-329



Original Page



Transcription

Sherard thanks Sloane for his favours. He will be sending books from Paris, probably through Holland to avoid the customs duties on French goods. Dr Chirac has provided Sherard with books for Sloane. He discusses his travel plans. Sherard was a botanist and cataloguer. He worked for the Turkish Company at Smyrna where he collected botanical specimens and antiques (D. E. Allen, Sherard, William (16591728), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/25355, accessed 24 June 2011]).




Patient Details

Letter 2335

Johann Georg Steigertahl to Hans Sloane – June 23, 1719


Item info

Date: June 23, 1719
Author: Johann Georg Steigertahl
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: ff. 219-220



Original Page



Transcription

Steigertahl asks Sloane what type of medals he would like for his cabinet. He informs Sloane that he offered Barham’s short treatise to the King. He is going to try to persuade the King to buy shares in a company that manufactures and produces silk in England. Steigertahl sends his compliments to Barham and would like to know what he should do next regarding the business venture. Mr Mustapsa, who recently visited London, thanks and compliments Sloane. Steigertahl has continued giving the King mineral water and ‘kinkina’ at the ‘Herrenhaus’. Johann Georg Steigertahl (1666-1740) was the personal physician to George I of England. He was a member of the Royal Society and secured the purchase of Engelbert Kaempfer’s collection of East Asian curiosities for Sir Hans Sloane in 1723 (http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Georg_Steigerthal).




Patient Details

Making Sense of Hans Sloane’s Collections

When Sir Hans Sloane died in 1753, the British nation purchased his collection and established the British Museum. Over the next two centuries, the collection was dispersed as new institutions were formed. The Natural History Museum, which opened in 1881, acquired Sloane’s plant and animal collections. The British Library, established in 1973, laid claim to the manuscripts and printed books. If this sounds orderly, it wasn’t!

Box from the Herbarium at the Natural History Museum, with labels. Image copyright: Victoria Pickering, 2013.

Box from the Herbarium at the Natural History Museum, with labels. Image copyright: Victoria Pickering, 2013.

Just to give a hint of the complexity, it’s worth noting that bits of Sloane’s correspondence appear on the backs of natural history drawings that are held in the British Museum and some of his reading notes appear in printed catalogues at the Natural History Museum.

Considering the scope of Sloane’s collections, it is surprising that relatively little scholarly work has been done on them. But the three institutions are trying to bring Sloane’s collections back together virtually in a fascinating project, Reconstructing Sloane. The first step was The Sloane Printed Books Project, a catalogue that allows researchers to get a sense of what Sloane’s original library looked like and how it changed over time. The second step is a grant that has allowed the institutions to partner with Queen Mary University of London and King’s College London to fund three collaborative doctoral awards. Alice Marples, Felicity Roberts and Victoria Pickering have all taken on the challenge of reconstructing parts of Sloane’s vast collections. To my delight, they will be occasionally sharing the fruits of their research on The Sloane Letters Blog.

Alice (KCL ), who has a background in Enlightenment coffee-houses, is researching Sloane’s correspondence and manuscripts at the British Library. In particular, she is looking at Sloane’s network of colleagues, commercial traders and contributors to understand Sloane’s public persona. Through his correspondence, he was able to construct a space for material exchange, scientific endeavour and social interaction.

Felicity (KCL) has degrees in English and eighteenth-century studies. She is looking at Sloane’s natural history drawings, primarily held at the British Museum, to discover how Sloane interpreted and visualized the natural world. Her study is situated within London’s wider philosophical and literary culture, which disucssed concepts of nature, natural order, truth, beauty and authenticity.

Herbarium drawer filled with boxes of vegetable substances, Natural History Museum. Image copyright: Victoria Pickering, 2013.

Herbarium drawer filled with boxes of vegetable substances, Natural History Museum. Image copyright: Victoria Pickering, 2013.

Victoria (QMUL) previously studied the early modern transatlantic slave trade. Her project, “Putting Nature in a Box” examines Sloane’s collection of 12000 small boxes of vegetable substances, which included seeds, bark and curios. Using Sloane’s hand-written, three volume catalogue, she is tracing who sent what items, the origins of the substances, and Sloane’s intended uses for the objects.

What is, perhaps, most exciting about these projects is that they are not undertaken in isolation. The students and their supervisors at all six institutions (and occasionally, me!) have regular seminars. Along the way, seminars have included discussions about readings, visits to the collections or guest speakers. The interdisciplinary collaboration is providing us with an appreciation of the sheer size of Sloane’s collections and how each part fits together.  The students’ individual projects are enhanced by a wider understanding of curation, cataloguing and collecting: how Sloane’s collection has been constructed, deconstructed and reconstructed over time. With a collection so large and dispersed, collaboration is also the only way scholars will ever make sense of Sloane’s complete collections.

There are other advantages, too. “Working collaboratively”, writes Victoria, “provides a wonderful support network” and is “an interesting and exciting opportunity”—and besides, there is “nothing quite like being able to talk to another PhD student about your work and for them to know exactly what you’re talking about.” It is also, perhaps, the best way of studying a man who was a super-mediator in his own life, and one who valued the sharing of knowledge. As Alice puts it, this “collective engagement with knowledge production and diffusion is something that Sloane himself would no doubt appreciate!” 

No doubt.