Adrian Beverland

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Adrian Beverland
Adrian Beverland in 1689
Adrian Beverland in 1689
Born 1650 (1650)
Died 1716 (1717) (aged 66)
Occupation Dutch philosopher

Adriaan Beverland, known in English and French as Adrian Beverland (20 September 1650 Middelburg, Zeeland — 14 December 1716 London) was a Dutch philosopher and jurist who settled in England.

Life

File:Ary de Vois - Adriaan van Beverland.jpg
Adrian Beverland, in a painting attributed to Ary de Vois

Adrian Beverland studied at Leiden University, where he produced a treatise on Original sin, for which he was expelled from the university, imprisoned and fined, but released on promising never to write on the subject again. He then moved to Utrecht, where his behaviour led to the magistrates privately warning him to leave the city; in response he wrote a satire called Vox clamantis in deserto, which he distributed in manuscript form.[1]

In 1679 he moved to England as secretary to Isaac Vossius. In 1684, he was appointed Gentleman of the Horse under John Vaughan, 3rd Earl of Carbery.

In 1698,[1] he published De fornicatione cavenda: admonitio sive adhortatio ad pudicitiam et castitatem, with a new edition in 1710.[2] In this he claimed to have repented of his former dissolute lifestyle, asking in the preface, anyone who had a manuscript of his previous works "to return it to me, that I may burn it myself".[1]

He fell into a state of poverty following the death of Vossius.[1] By 1692, he was living in London and died there in 1716 insane.

His annotated copy of Basilii Fabri, sorani, Thesaurus eruditionis scholasticae (Leipzig, 1696) is in the library of St Johns College Cambridge.[3]

Portraits

In a portrait attributed to Ary de Vois, now in the Rijksmuseum, Beverland is shown seated at a table, with a prostitute.[4] There is another painting of him in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford,[5] once thought to be by Godfrey Kneller.[1] An engraving of 1686 by Isaac Beckett, after a design by Simon du Bois shows Beverland, (in a parody of a respectable 1670 frontispiece by Abraham Blotelingh of Lorenzo Pignoria), amongst Egyptian antiquities, sketching a female nude.[6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., Biography (1812), V, 201.
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  6. Edward Chaney, "Roma Britannica and the Cultural Memory of Egypt: Lord Arundel and the Obelisk of Domitian", in Roma Britannica: Art Patronage and Cultural Exchange in Eighteenth-Century Rome, eds. D. Marshall, K. Wolfe and S. Russell, British School at Rome, 2011, pp. 147–70

External links