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Letter 3754

Johann Eberhard Rau to Hans Sloane – April 12, 1730


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Date: April 12, 1730
Author: Johann Eberhard Rau
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4051
Folio: ff. 17-18



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Johann Eberhard Rau (1695-1770) was a Protestant theologian and professor. He studied at the University of Marburg and was elected a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences in Berlin for his scientific achievements in 1729. He received a professorship at the University of Frankfurt in 1746 (Otto Friedrich, “Rau, Johann Eberhard”, in: General German Biography (1888), S. 379-380 [Online version]; URL: http://www.deutsche-biographie.de/pnd131494376.html?anchor=adb).




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Letter 1274

Jean de Fontaney to Hans Sloane – December 1, 1705


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Date: December 1, 1705
Author: Jean de Fontaney
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4040
Folio: ff. 99-100



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Fontaney recommends the three missionaries destined for China. They will serve Sloane by collecting curiosities for him. Fontaney asks Sloane to recommend them to the East India Company, with whom they will be travelling. Jean de Fontaney (1643-1710) was a Jesuit priest who led Louis XIV’s mission to China in 1685. He and his team were admitted to the Academie des Sciences and equipped with astronomical and geological instruments to collect information on their trip. Fontaney was also a distinguished teacher of mathematics and astronomy at the College de Louis le Grand. His work was published in the Journal des Scavans and Memoires de l’Academie des Sciences (David E. Mungello, Curious land: Jesuit accommodation and the origins of Sinology, University of Hawaii Press, 1989: pp. 329-330).




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Letter 2196

Bezaleel Sherman to Hans Sloane – July 20, 1720


Item info

Date: July 20, 1720
Author: Bezaleel Sherman
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: ff. 347-348



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Transcription

Sherman thanks Sloane for replying to his letter requesting advice on investing in the South Sea Company, even though Sloane would not help him. See: Sloane MS 4045, fols. 339-340. Bezaleel Sherman was a surgeon.




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Letter 2408

Bezaleel Sherman to Hans Sloane – July 12, 1720


Item info

Date: July 12, 1720
Author: Bezaleel Sherman
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: ff. 339-340



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Transcription

Sherman asks about the bones of a calf fetus he sent Sloane some years back. See: Sloane MS 4041, fols. 198-199, 204-205. He is not doing well financially and asks that Sloane help him find investment opportunities in the South Sea Company. Sherman is unable to ride and cannot work as a result. Bezaleel Sherman was a surgeon.




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Letter 2537

Philip Rose to Hans Sloane – January 8, 1721/22


Item info

Date: January 8, 1721/22
Author: Philip Rose
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 175-176



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[fol. 175] hon.ble S.r This day I was to wait on you, between nine and ten in the Morning, and I understood that you went out at eight. Since that I called between Eleven and twelve at old Man’s; where about Eleven you did call, before I came. I had been glad to have had a short conference with you, but for this time I am disapointed; however S.r I hope I am not out of yr Thoughe, and though the Common Report maketh The Contagion Bill somewhat severe, I am resolved to submit to what Regulations, The King and parliament, or King and Council, with The wise advice of y.r self and other select physicians, shall determine Mrs. Wagener who liveth in Jermyn Street, over against Berry or Duke street end S.t James, is the patient who produced that Fungous excrescence you have by you. She hath one son, viz. Colonel Lloyd of The Guards. what I set down in this Letter is not to publish her name to the world; but onely to intimate, that That Gentlewoman, will at any time when the Question is asked by a Physician, confirme what I have printed, or written upon the Labels relating to her case. This S.r I hope will be fully satisfactory to you, as to the Truth and Genuiness of That product, and the person from whom it came. S.r Hans I wish you and y.r Lady and good Family, a happy new year and a numerous repitition of The Like, being with all due Respect Hon.ble S.r y.r Faithfull and most obedient servant Phil. Rose. Jan. 8. 1721/2

Philip Rose was admitted a Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians in 1691. In 1728 he was forgiven 12 pounds owed to the College (http://munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk/Biography/Details/3854).




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Letter 2924

Timothy Harris to Hans Sloane – April 19, 1723


Item info

Date: April 19, 1723
Author: Timothy Harris
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 347-348



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Transcription

Harris reminds Sloane of the ‘Indian Pastoral’ he sent. He praises Sloane’s knowledge of philosophy and calls him ‘Master in all other Liberal Arts and Sciences’. ‘Kings bench prison’ is unpleasant and Harris again asks that Sloane help him get out of ‘the horror & dismality of the place’. He hates to have to write Sloane, but he has been incarcerated for four months for a small debt. If Sloane helps him he will publish the ‘Indian Pastoral’ and give it to the ‘East India Company’ men. The bearer will take Sloane’s reply to Harris. Timothy Harris was Keeper of the Coffee House in Ormond Street, London.




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Letter 2427

Johann Georg Steigertahl to Hans Sloane – September 24, 1720


Item info

Date: September 24, 1720
Author: Johann Georg Steigertahl
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 23-24



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Steigertahl asks for Sloane’s view of the actions of the ‘compagnie d’Harbourg’. The ‘conseil prive’ has not yet agreed on a position. He informs Sloane of the latest news from Hanover and assures him of the health of George I and Prince Frederick. 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).




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Letter 2613

S. Mapletoft to Hans Sloane – August 15, 1724


Item info

Date: August 15, 1724
Author: S. Mapletoft
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4076
Folio: ff. 127-128



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Fols. 127-128 I beg leave to remember you…Mr Greenhill was to consult you in a settled disorder of his head, a species of vertigo, brought upon him first by removing from Hartfordshire a clear sharp air to … a dampy fen air, in which he has been about ten years, his first disorder was just upon entrance, a slow continued nervous feaver, which went of[f] but sluggishly and seems to have shock’d and weaken’d the whole nervous system the badness of the air still contributing, that life is con’t but with unplesantness not long before He apply’d to you. He was gradually seiz’d with near a total desperation of life. his Blood stagnating in his extreme parts and they went cold, but was happily relieved and only then, by bleeding. He is about five and thirty years of age and born certainly with as strong and firm stamina vitae as any man and is as well and robust as possible this unhappiness above excepted, has much endeavour’d to make out for the air by increase exercise, in an use of which, He says always, he is better but no sooner discon’t, than a return of his disorder, He is of a plethorick habit and eats moderately drinks and sleeps very well, but no sooner wakens than than the usual complaint, He bleeds as oft as there seems any advanced fulness of blood, takes vomits, purges and has us’d the most efficacious alteratives but always without any sensible relife, though I do imagine they back future ills; but this is justly observable. He never changes ye air, but finds an almost immediate abatement of this disorder [Sloane: Elect, cephal. chalybeat, pil calhart]




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Letter 2433

Johann Georg Steigertahl to Hans Sloane – October 15, 1720


Item info

Date: October 15, 1720
Author: Johann Georg Steigertahl
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 34-35



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Transcription

Steigertahl received word of his losses in the South Sea Bubble. He did not lose all of the capital he invested in the Company. The King has been feeling slightly better after getting some exercise while hunting. 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).




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Letter 2449

Anne Hamilton to Hans Sloane – February 2, 1720/21


Item info

Date: February 2, 1720/21
Author: Anne Hamilton
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 64-65



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Hamilton thanks Sloane for coming ‘to a small agreement with [his] niece’, who had given her ‘poor friend so much trouble’. It took ‘a thousand pound’ to be ‘happily rid of her’. She asks Sloane to ‘pay our Legacies to my daughter Hamilton and leave what papers you find with her’.




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