Conditions Governing Access
Provenance
Biographical Note
Preferred Citation:
Scope and Content
Conditions Governing Use
Language of Material:
English
Contributing Institution:
Department of Special Collections and University Archives
Title: Gibbon Family Papers
Creator:
Gibbon family
Creator:
Gibbon, Edward
Creator:
James, King of England, I
Creator:
James, King of England, I
Creator:
Gibbon, Edward
Creator:
Ashton, Thomas
Creator:
Gibbon family
source:
Carnochan, W. B.
Creator:
Elizabeth I, Queen of England
Creator:
Elizabeth I, Queen of England
source:
Carnochan, W. B.
Creator:
Gibbon family
Creator:
Ashton, Thomas
Identifier/Call Number: M0348
Identifier/Call Number: 515
Physical Description:
3 Linear Feet
[2 manuscript boxes, 3 flat boxes]
Date (inclusive): 1519-1813
Physical Location: Special Collections and University Archives materials are stored offsite and must be paged 36 hours in advance.
Conditions Governing Access
Open for research. Note that material must be requested at least 36 hours in advance of intended use.
Provenance
This collection was given by W.B. Carnochan to Stanford University, Special Collections in 1981.
Biographical Note
Edward Gibbon was born in Putney, 27 April 1737. His mother died in 1747, and his father, Edward Gibbon (1707-1770), retired
from a political career to live at Buriton, near Petersfield, in Hampshire. Gibbon entered Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1752,
but left in 1753 without taking a degree. He spent the next five years living in Lausanne, Switzerland and returned to England
in 1758, when his father married his second wife, Dorothea Gibbon, (née Patton).
At Lausanne in 1764 Gibbon met John Baker Holroyd (1735-1821), the first Earl of Sheffield. He became his most intimate friend
and most important correspondent. In this year as well the idea came to him to write a comprehensive history of Rome: as I
sat musing amidst the ruins of the Capitol, while the barefooted fryars were singing Vespers in the Temple of Jupiter... the
idea of writing the decline and fall of the City first started to my mind. However, filial obligations and military service
prevented him from devoting himself to writing full-time until his father's death in November, 1770. He then moved to London,
where the eight volumes of his
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire were published at regular intervals starting in 1776. He took up residence again at Lausanne in 1783, where he continued his
work on
The Decline and Fall. He returned to England upon the death of the first Lady Sheffield in 1793. He died suddenly of gout in 1794 and was buried
at Fletching Church, Sussex. In 1796 Lord Sheffield published two quarto volumes of Gibbon's
Miscellaneous Works. A second edition was printed in 1814.
Preferred Citation:
[Identification of item] Gibbon Family Papers (M0348). Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford Libraries,
Stanford, Calif.
Scope and Content
Special Collections M0348 consists of letters, household bills and accounts, and legal documents related to the Gibbon Family.
The three autograph letters by Edward Gibbon are addressed to Mrs. Holroyd, the first Lady Sheffield, at Brighthelmstone.
The first concerns his father's fatal illness, 1770. The other two are light in tone, as he jokes about the dilatory nature
of her dressmaker and his bookbinder (Madame de Sevigné... is now in Hall's hands from which books do not easily escape) and
sends her news of mutual friends, 1775. The collection also includes letters to Lord Sheffield by Jean David Levade, a professor
of moral theology at the Séminaire de Lausanne, announcing the death of one of Gibbon's closest friends, Mme. Catherine Charrière
de Sévery, 1796; by W. Charrière de Severy, her son, one concerning Gibbon's legacy to him, 1796-1820; and G. H. de Seigneux,
1820. There are two letters by Hester Gibbon, Edward Gibbon's aunt, one of which refers to her nephew, the historian, 1786.
There is also a letter from Francis North, later second Earl of Guilford, to his sister Anne, later Countess of Sheffield
and third wife of John Baker Holroyd, in which he gives an irreverent description of Gibbon at a party in Lausanne, 1791.
The collection also contains a memorandum of an agreement, signed, between Lord Sheffield and John Murray, for publication
of Gibbon's
Miscellaneous Works.
The household documents include Edward Gibbon senior's house and farm account book at Buriton, 1765, and fragments of the
account book, 1767, household correspondence, bills and accounts, 1742-70. Also included are letters and documents concerning
the estate of Dorothea Gibbon, 1790-97 and photocopies of sequestered papers relating to the Gibbon property at Mapledurham,
1693-1744.
Conditions Governing Use
While Special Collections is the owner of the physical and digital items, permission to examine collection materials is not
an authorization to publish. These materials are made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Any transmission
or reproduction beyond that allowed by fair use requires permission from the owners of rights, heir(s) or assigns.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Pryor, William
Hanbury, Thomas
Hanbury, Thomas
Pryor, William
Carnochan, W. B.
Carnochan, W. B.