LEWTY, Richard ‹ LBT 09169 ›: Difference between revisions
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| [[Calendar:1600s:1629:28-Oct|28 Oct 1629]] || Bound || to Thomas Purfoot [[PURFOOT, Thomas ( - 1640) ‹ LBT 07180 ›|(LBT/07180)]] | | [[Calendar:1600s:1629:28-Oct|28 Oct 1629]] || Bound || to Thomas Purfoot [[PURFOOT, Thomas ( - 1640) ‹ LBT 07180 ›|(LBT/07180)]] | ||
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| [[Calendar:1600s:1637:2-Oct| | | [[Calendar:1600s:1637:2-Oct|2 Oct 1637]] || Freed - Servitude || | ||
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== Sources and References == | == Sources and References == | ||
Revision as of 22:54, 20 March 2026
floruit (B) 1637 - 1637 ; Male, married
Family Relationships
| LBTNumber | Name | Relationship | Occupation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3349 | BATHURST, Christian (mar. LEWTY) ‹ LBT 03349 › | spouse | |
| 33242 | LEWTY, Richard ‹ LBT 33242 › | parent | Gentleman |
Livery Companies
| Company | Source |
|---|---|
| Stationers' Company | McKenzie, D.F. (1961), #0441 |
Occupations (2)
| Occupation | Comment |
|---|---|
| Printer | Apprentice |
| Stationer | McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910) |
Was Apprentice to Master(s): (1)
| Name | Premium | Paid By | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| PURFOOT, Thomas ( - 1640) ‹ LBT 07180 › |
Events (2)
| Date | Event type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 28 Oct 1629 | Bound | to Thomas Purfoot (LBT/07180) |
| 2 Oct 1637 | Freed - Servitude |
Sources and References
| Original Sources | Comments |
|---|---|
| Stationers' Company - Binding and Freedom Records - McKenzie, D.F. (1961), # 0441 |
SOURCES & TRANSCRIPTIONS
Transcriptions
McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910), p.175
LEWTY (RICHARD), stationer in London, 1637-40. Took up his freedom in the Company of Stationers on October 2nd, 1637 [Arber, iii. 688]. He married Christian, the daughter of Richard Bathurst of Bromley, who had been living for two years at the house of Thomas Purfoot, junior { PURFOOT, Thomas ( - 1640) ‹ LBT 07180 › }. Thumas Purfoot shortly before his death in 1640 assigned his copyrights to R. Lewty, who in the Register is wrongly described as his son-in-law. There is no evidence tbat Lewty ever published any of these hooks, but a few days after receiving them he transferred one, William Crashaw's Decimarum et oblationum tabula, to Andrew Cooke { ? }, after which nothing more is heard of him [Arber, iv. 510, 511].