Кэролайн Абрахам
Кэролайн Абрахам | |
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Рожденный | Кэролайн Харриет Хадсон 25 мая 1809 года [ 1 ] |
Умер | 17 June 1877 Bournemouth, Hampshire, England | (aged 68)
Other names | Caroline Harriet Palmer |
Known for | Watercolour artist; writer; wife of an Anglican bishop |
Spouse | |
Relatives | Charles Palmer (father) Charles Abraham (son) |
Кэролайн Харриет Авраам ( урожденная Хадсон , позже Палмер ; 25 мая 1809 - 17 июня 1877 года) была английским художником, значительным в истории Новой Зеландии , создав полезный отчет об этой стране в девятнадцатом веке. Она была влиятельной женой епископа и матерью другого. Она собрала книгу с другими, поддерживая права маори .
Жизнь
[ редактировать ]Кэролайн Харриет Палмер родилась и крещена в 1809 году в Ванлипе , Лестершир, Англия. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Она была дочерью Гарриет Пепперэлл и Чарльза Томаса Хадсона . В 1813 году ее отец преуспел в баронете Палмера в Зале Ванлип и сменил фамилию с Хадсона на Палмер, чтобы соответствовать условиям наследства. Семейным местом был Wanlip Hall , который был снесен в 20 -м веке . [ 2 ]
In 1850, she married the Rev. Charles Abraham and they emigrated to New Zealand shortly after, as her husband wanted to work with George Selwyn,[3] since 1841 the Bishop there. They arrived in Auckland on 6 August 1850 with their servant.[5] Selwyn appointed her husband to lead the multi-level educational establishment, St John's College, which he had founded in 1843. Her husband trained both Māori and European youths.[6]
Her husband was ordained to become the Bishop of Wellington whilst on a trip to England in 1857.[3] Her only son, Charles, was born the same year and he went on to be the Bishop of Derby.
Abraham was a water colourist and her scenes of early New Zealand immigrant settlements are held by the National Library of New Zealand[8] and Auckland Council[9][4] They are an important source of information from this period. During the New Zealand Wars she advocated for the Māori.[3]
The publication that she helped create was called Extracts of letters from New Zealand on the war question and it was published in 1861.[10] She wrote it with her cousin Sarah Selwyn, Bishop George Selwyn, her husband and Sir William and Lady Mary Ann Martin. George Selwyn was Bishop of New Zealand, and Sir William Martin was the Chief Justice. Abraham believed that the Māori people (then called natives of New Zealand and similar) were a proud race whose rights needed to be considered. This book was distributed privately after being printed in London.[3]
In 1862 a set of eight matching lithographs were published, based on images she had created. Together they represented a panorama of Tamaki, showing the site of St John's Chapel and school buildings in Auckland. The lithography was achieved by an unnamed sister of Rev. William C. Cotton.[7]
In 1867 Abraham and her son returned to England in order for him to study at Eton. Three years later, her husband also went back to England as his friend George Selwyn was to be made Bishop of Lichfield.[11]
Abraham died in Bournemouth in 1877.[6]
Legacy
[edit]She was the wife of a bishop and the mother of another.[3] Her paintings and sketches are held in several collections in New Zealand. One of her sketchbooks is in Auckland Public Library and this records the influence on her of classically trained, but New Zealand artists like Albin Martin and John Hoyte.[3]
References
[edit]
- ^ England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538–1975
- ^ Jump up to: a b Obituary, The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, Volume 97, Part 1
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Kirker, Anne. "Caroline Harriet Abraham". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Una Platts. "ABRAHAM, Caroline Harriet, nee Palmer c.1835–1877 | NZETC". Nzetc.victoria.ac.nz. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
- ^ "Shipping Intelligence". New Zealander. Vol. 6, no. 450. 7 August 1850. p. 2. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
- ^ Jump up to: a b W. G. D. Fletcher, 'Abraham, Charles John (1814–1903)', rev. H. C. G. Matthew, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2008 accessed 30 June 2014
- ^ Jump up to: a b Panorama, natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 29 June 2014
- ^ "Abraham, Caroline Harriet, 1809?–1877 :Sketchbook. [1860–1864]". National Library of New Zealand. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
- ^ "Caroline Abraham artworks". Auckland Art Gallery. Retrieved 9 July 2024.
- ^ «Извлечения писем из Новой Зеландии по вопросу о войне; со статьей из Новой Зеландии зрителя 3 ноября 1860 года; и копией законопроекта о родных правонарушителях [электронный ресурс]» . Европейская . Получено 30 июня 2014 года .
- ^ Макдональд, Шарлотта (1991). Книга новозеландских женщин . Веллингтон: Бриджит Уильямс книги. п. 2. ISBN 0908912048 .
- 1809 Рождения
- 1877 Смерть
- Женщины-артисты из новозеландских артистов 19-го века
- Люди из Wanlip
- Дочери баронетов
- Британские эмигранты в Новую Зеландию
- Английские художники 19-го века
- Английские женские художники
- Британские женщины-художники 19-го века
- Художники из новозеландского 19-го века
- Английские женщины 19-го века
- Женщины 19-го века