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  1. Samuel Pepys Cockerell (15 February 1753 – 12 July 1827) was an English architect. He was a son of John Cockerell, of Bishop's Hull, Somerset, and the elder brother of Sir Charles Cockerell, 1st Baronet , for whom he designed the house he is best known for, Sezincote House , Gloucestershire, the uniquely Orientalising features of ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Samuel_PepysSamuel Pepys - Wikipedia

    Samuel Pepys FRS ( / piːps /; [1] 23 February 1633 – 26 May 1703) was an English diarist and naval administrator. He served as administrator of the Royal Navy and Member of Parliament, but is most remembered today for the diary he kept for almost a decade.

  3. A Jacobean gabled manor, Sezincote, in 1795, was in much need of repair and renovation, and John Cockerell commissioned his brother, Samuel Pepys Cockerell, to develop and alter the house, outbuildings and estate. The intention at this time was to keep the alterations simple, within a primarily European idiom. [13] .

  4. Sezincote House (pronounced seas in coat) is the centre of a country estate in the civil parish of Sezincote, in the county of Gloucestershire, England. The house was designed by Samuel Pepys Cockerell, built in 1805, and is a notable example of Neo-Mughal architecture, a 19th-century reinterpretation of 16th and 17th-century ...

  5. celm.folger.edu › introductions › PepysSamuelCELM: Samuel Pepys

    Among the later collections and notes on Pepys that may be recorded are: modern notes on Pepys's Diary by Sir Stephen Gaselee (Folger, MS Y.d.72; Harvard, MS Eng 991.2); and a collection partly relating to Samuel Pepys Cockerell and J.W. Freshfield sold at Sotheby's, 22 July 1988, lot 348, to N.D. Tarling; while papers relating to the early ...

  6. Profile. Born: 1844. Died: [post-1907] Gender: Male. Share. Lord Leighton PRA. Drawings & studies in pencil, chalk and other mediums / by Lord Leighton of Stretton ; facsimiled after the originals ; with a preface by S. Pepys Cockerell. - London,: 1898. 13/3095. Typescript account of the final hours of Frederic, Lord Leighton. Item LEI/48/2.

  7. Whether this is true or not, advertising Sezincote in this way appears to have been a way of building or enhancing reputations, not just for Daniell (who was already a Royal Academian) and Martin, but also for Sezincote and thus for the Cockerells – Samuel Pepys as an architect and Charles as a man of taste perhaps, but more importantly as a ...