- Fulwar Craven, 4th Baron Craven
Fulwar Craven, 4th Baron Craven (died 10 November 1764), was an English nobleman and sportsman.
He was educated at
Rugby School andMagdalen College, Oxford . He became High Steward of Newbury, and was about to stand for Parliament for Berkshire when his brother William's death in 1739 brought him the Barony of Craven.He was famously fond of racing and hunting, hunting on his Berkshire estates at
Hamstead Marshall and Ashdown Park, keeping his own stud ofracehorse s and founding a racecourse atLambourn . He and his brother William founded theCraven Hunt , and he appears inJames Seymour 's 1743 "A Kill at Ashdown Park", a picture owned by the Craven family until 1968.When not hunting, Craven resided at
Coombe Abbey inWarwickshire . He continued to hunt until his death at oldBenham Park in 1764 after a long illness. He was buried atHamstead Marshall , and being unmarried and childless, was succeeded by his nephew William.References
*cite web | url=http://www.hamsteadmarshall.net/CravenCountry/10villageinStuart.html | title=Craven Country: the story of Hamstead Marshall | accessdate=2006-11-01
External links
* [http://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ViewWork?cgroupid=999999973&workid=13325&searchid=29231 A Kill at Ashdown Park]
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