Charter House, from the Square
Exterior view of buildings with an arched entrance at left, a wall, then additional structures. Across the street in front is a gated square. The print illustrates Ackermann's "History of the Colleges," 1816.
The complex in Clerkenwell, London (now Islington), takes its name from a Carthusian priory founded there in 1371 and dissolved by Henry VIII in 1537. The site was largely rebuilt in the 1540s into a large Tudor courtyard house. When the wealthy businessman Thomas Sutton bought the property in 1611, he used it to establish a school and an almshouse (a retirement home for male pensioners), institutions depicted here. An almshouse still occupies the site but the school moved to Godalming, Surrey in 1872.
The complex in Clerkenwell, London (now Islington), takes its name from a Carthusian priory founded there in 1371 and dissolved by Henry VIII in 1537. The site was largely rebuilt in the 1540s into a large Tudor courtyard house. When the wealthy businessman Thomas Sutton bought the property in 1611, he used it to establish a school and an almshouse (a retirement home for male pensioners), institutions depicted here. An almshouse still occupies the site but the school moved to Godalming, Surrey in 1872.
Artwork Details
- Title: Charter House, from the Square
- Engraver: Joseph Constantine Stadler (German, active London, 1780–1822)
- Artist: After William Westall (British, Hertford 1781–1850 London)
- Publisher: Rudolph Ackermann, London (British, active 1794–1832)
- Date: July 1, 1816
- Medium: Hand-colored etching and aquatint
- Dimensions: Sheet (trimmed and inset): 9 3/16 × 11 3/8 in. (23.4 × 28.9 cm)
- Classification: Prints
- Credit Line: Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1917
- Object Number: 17.3.1167-62
- Curatorial Department: Drawings and Prints
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