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William Hamilton

 
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Sir William Hamilton
Hamilton, Sir William, 1730-1803, British diplomat and archaeologist, ambassador to Naples (1764-1800). He was the husband of Emma, Lady Hamilton, mistress of Admiral Horatio Nelson. His fine collection of antiquities from Pompeii was sold to the British Museum in 1772 and stimulated English interest in the art of the classical civilizations. His publications include Antiquités étrusques, greques et romaines (1766-67) and Mount Vesuvius (1772).

Bibliography

See biography by B. Fothergill (1969); J. Russell, Nelson and the Hamiltons (1969).

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William Hamilton (diplomat)

William Hamilton (diplomat)
Born 13 December 1730
Died 6 April 1803
Nationality Scottish
Fields archaeologist
vulcanologist

Sir William Hamilton, KB, PC (13 December 1730 – 6 April 1803) was a Scottish diplomat, antiquarian, archaeologist and vulcanologist.

Hamilton was the fourth son of Lord Archibald Hamilton, governor of Jamaica. He was commissioned into the 3rd Foot Guards in 1747 and was promoted Lieutenant in 1753. He left the Army after his marriage to Catherine Barlow, daughter of MP Hugh Barlow, on 25 January 1758. Catherine died on 25 August 1782. The couple had no children.

In A Cognocenti contemplating ye Beauties of ye Antique (1801), James Gillray caricatured both Hamilton's antiquarian pursuits and the affair between his wife and Nelson.

Hamilton was Britain's ambassador to the court of Naples from 1764 - 1800. During this time he studied local volcanic activity and earthquakes, and wrote a book on the ancient Roman city of Pompeii. He collected Greek vases and other antiquities, selling part of his collection to the British Museum in 1772. A small part of his second collection went down with HMS Colossus while being transported to Britain in 1798. The surviving part of the second collection was catalogued for sale at auction at Christie's when at the eleventh hour Thomas Hope stepped in and purchased the remains of Hamilton's second collection of mostly South Italian vases. His other books include Antiquités étrusques, grecques et romaines (1766–67) and Observations on Mount Vesuvius (1772).

In 1786, a stunning young lady was sent to Sir William by his nephew, Charles Greville, in exchange for him settling Greville's debts. Like most of the men who wandered into her orbit, Sir William was smitten with Emma Lyon, who performed dances inspired by classical elements for himself and his guests, including Goethe, while wearing no undergarments. However, he made no advances until she was ready to accept him. They married on 6 September 1791 at St Marylebone Church, London. He was 60; she was 26. She later became the lover of Horatio Nelson, a man Sir William admired greatly, and whose liaison he reportedly encouraged.

Homage

Rock island "Vesuvius" and Villa Hamilton

Hamilton's life was fictionalized by Susan Sontag in her novel The Volcano Lover: A Romance.

In the Dessau-Wörlitz Garden Realm there is an island in a lake atop which is a model of Mount Vesuvius. The Duke would stage fireworks that seemed to issue from an erupting volcano to entertain his guests. At the foot of the mountain on the island is a building intended to suggest William Hamilton's home "Villa Emma" in Naples (Posillipo). It is a highly unusual tribute to a great scholar.

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Sir James Gray
Ambassador to The Two Sicilies
1764 – 1800
Succeeded by
Sir Arthur Paget
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
William Hewson
Copley Medal
1770
Succeeded by
Matthew Raper

 
 

 

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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