F. PARKES WEBER ON DEATH AND NUMISMATICS Public Deposited

Article content
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 33, July 31, 2005, Article 13

    F. PARKES WEBER ON DEATH AND NUMISMATICS

    Recently I asked about books by F. Parkes Weber.
    Ken Bressett writes: "Regarding "Aspects of Death In Art" by
    Weber, I have a copy of the book, and it does seem to be rather
    scarce. It is reprinted, with additions, from an article that first
    appeared in Numismatic Chronicle in 1909-1910, Nos 36-38.
    Good reading, and unique in its numismatic coverage."

    Hadrien Rambach writes: "Here are descriptions of my different
    copies of Weber:

    WEBER, F. P. Aspects of death and their effects on the living,
    as illustrated by minor works of art, especially medals, engraved
    gems, jewels &c. Chicago (The Open Court Publishing Company)
    s.d. [1910]. American issue of the first edition. Octavo, viii, 160
    pp., 58 illustrations in the text, gilt publisher’s cloth with
    embossed macabre medal by Boldu on the board. Perfect condition.
    Very rare.

    After several articles published in the Numismatic Chronicle in
    1909-1910 (numbers 36-38), Friedrich Parkes Weber (1863-1962,
    a member of the Royal Numismatic Society since 1885) wrote
    the book Aspects of death and their effects on the living, as illustrated
    by minor works of art, especially medals, engraved gems, jewels
    &c. the first edition of which was published in 1910. It was
    enlarged and republished in London at T. Fisher Unwin and
    Bernard Quaritch in 1914 (xxviii, 461 pages, 123 illustrations).
    A third edition appeared in 1918 with a modified title: Aspects
    of death and correlated aspects of life in art, epigram, and poetry.
    Contributions towards an anthology and an iconography of the
    subject (xl + 784 pages). The 4th and largest edition was printed
    again by T. Fisher Unwin, in 1922, and republished in Maryland
    in 1971. In 1914, the author had also published Art and epigram
    regarding science and medicine in relation to death, together with
    an Addition on Epigram and art in relation to the excessive fear
    of death. It was translated by Eugen Holländer and published in
    1923 under the title Des Todes Bild (247 pp. illustrated). All of
    these four editions had a brilliant and unique study of the
    “aspects of death” in coins and medals. He also published in
    1956 in London (H.K. Lewis & Co.) a book entitled Interesting
    cases and pathological considerations and a numismatic suggestion
    (octavo, iv, 78 pages, with text-illustrations)."

    [To conserve space I've edited out Hadrien's descriptions of
    the third and fourth editions of the work. Is the 1971 reprint
    readily available? -Editor]

    Larry Mitchell writes: "There are two other well-known books
    relating to death and numismatics:

    Hough, Franklin Benjamin. Washingtoniana: or,
    Memorials of the death of George Washington, giving an
    account of the funeral honors paid to his memory, with
    a list of tracts and volumes printed upon the
    occasion, and a catalogue of medals commemorating the
    event. Roxbury, MA: Printed for W.E. Woodward, 1865.

    Boyd, Andrew. A memorial Lincoln bibliography: being
    an account of books, eulogies, sermons, portraits,
    engravings, medals, etc., published upon Abraham
    Lincoln, sixteenth president of the United States,
    assassinated Good Friday, April 14, 1865; comprising a
    collection in the possession of the compiler, Andrew
    Boyd ... Albany, NY: A. Boyd, 1870.

    While these titles are specific to the subject, more
    general titles--Brown's 3-volume series on "British
    Historical Medals," for example--include numerous
    specimens of such "funerary art" in miniature."

Source URL Date published
  • 2005-07-31
Volume
  • 8

Relationships

NNP Author