- Robert Vaughan (antiquary)
Robert Powell Vaughan (?1592 - 16 May 1667) was an eminent Welsh
antiquary and collector of manuscripts. His collection, later known as the Hengwrt-Peniarth Library from the houses in which it was successively preserved, formed the nucleus of theNational Library of Wales , and is still in its care. [http://www.llgc.org.uk/index.php?id=llawysgrifaupeniarth The Peniarth Manuscripts] ,National Library of Wales ]Biography
Vaughan was born at Gwengraig,
Dolgellau , around 1592. Very little is known of his early life, but he was recorded as enteringOriel College, Oxford in 1612, though he left without taking his degree. He later settled at the mansion of Hengwrt ( _en. Old Court),Llanelltyd , also near Dolgellau, which had belonged to his mother's family. Vaughan was active in the legal affairs ofMerioneth and served on itsCommission of the peace . [http://yba.llgc.org.uk/en/s-VAUG-ROB-1592.html Robert Vaughan: Dictionary of Welsh Biography] ,National Library of Wales ]Vaughan's main interests lay in the early
history of Wales and ingenealogy . Though these were common enough pursuits for the rural gentry of the time, Vaughan devoted himself to them with great energy and diligence, as well as to the collection of early manuscripts and books which he amassed at Hengwrt, preserving many unique texts which might otherwise have been lost. He was able to increase his holdings further after making an arrangement with thecalligrapher and manuscript collector John Jones of Gellilyfdy,Flintshire , in which one would combine both collections on the other's death. [http://yba.llgc.org.uk/en/s-JONE-JOH-1578.html John Jones, of Gelli Lyfdy: Dictionary of Welsh Biography] ,National Library of Wales . The story of Jones and Vaughan's 'arrangement' is given by Saunderson in his 1834 edition of Vaughan's book "British Antiquities Revisited", but it is also suggested that Vaughan may have obtained the manuscripts as payment for a debt (Jones, alawyer by profession, was heavily in debt and repeatedly incarcerated in theFleet Prison ).] Vaughan also transcribed texts himself, carried out genealogical research, made an English translation of the "Brut y Tywysogion " (or "Chronicle of the Princes"), and wrote several short historical tracts as well as the book "British Antiquities Revived", first published at Oxford in 1662." [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=gDcLAAAAYAAJ&dq=british+antiquities+revived&source=gbs_summary_s&cad=0 British Antiquities Revived, or a Friendly Contest touching the Soveraignty of Three Ancient Princes of Wales in Ancient Times] ", Bala: R. Saunderson, 1834]He died in 1667 and was buried at Dolgellau. Vaughan had four sons and four daughters, and his descendants remained prominent in the area and its politics for many years. His daughter Jane was amongst the
Quaker s who emigrated toPennsylvania in the late 17th century under the leadership ofRowland Ellis .Glenn, T. A. "Welsh Founders of Pennsylvania", Genealogical Publishing Co, 1970, ISBN 9780806304304, pp. 57-59]The Hengwrt-Peniarth Library
Vaughan's remarkable collection of manuscripts remained at Hengwrt in the care of his descendants, though his collection of early printed books was dispersed by a
Bristol bookseller early in the 19th century. [http://yba.llgc.org.uk/en/s-VAUG-ROB-1592.html Robert Vaughan: Dictionary of Welsh Biography] ,National Library of Wales ] In 1905, after a long period of negotiation, Sir John Williams acquired a reversionary interest in the manuscripts from the Wynne family of Peniarth, William Watkin Wynne (1801-1880) having added substantially to the collection after being bequeathed it by Sir Robert Vaughan (1803-1859), theMember of Parliament for Merioneth. [http://yba.llgc.org.uk/en/s-WYNN-PEN-1275.html Wynne family, of Peniarth: Dictionary of Welsh Biography] ,National Library of Wales ] Koch, J. "Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopaedia", ABC-CLIO, 2005, ISBN 9781851094400 ,p.905] The Hengwrt-Peniarth library was then moved toAberystwyth , where the National Library of Wales was to be established.Vaughan's collection contains several texts of great historical or literary importance, such as the
Book of Taliesin , the so-calledHengwrt Manuscript of Chaucer'sCanterbury Tales , now thought to be the earliest known copy, and theBlack Book of Carmarthen .References
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