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  1. Basil Montagu (24 April 1770 – 27 November 1851) was a British jurist, barrister, writer and philanthropist. He was educated at Charterhouse and studied law at Cambridge. He was significantly involved in reforms to bankruptcy laws of Britain. He served as Accountant-General in Bankruptcy between 1835 and 1846.

  2. Basil Montagu. (17701851) author and legal reformer. Quick Reference. (1770–1851), a friend of Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Godwin; his young son (also Basil) lived with the Wordsworths during their West Country period.

  3. Basil and Anna Montagu: Touchstones for the Romantics RALPH M. WARDLE PEOPLE who knew Basil Montagu best generally agreed that he meant well--BTr. .... Fanny Kemble was charmed by his "ability, eccentricity, and personal beauty," his "extremely vivid and spar-kling" conversation, and "the impression of originality which he produced

  4. The Morgan’s manuscript has come to be known by the name of a later owner, Basil Montagu Pickering, who acquired it in 1865. Pickering published all of the poems in the manuscript the following year in Songs of Innocence and Experience, and Other Poems, edited by R. H. Shepherd..

  5. Basil Montagu (1770-1851), legal and miscellaneous writer, was born on 24 April 1770. He attended Charterhouse and Christ's College, Cambridge (B.A., 1790; M.A., 1793), before becoming a barrister at Gray's Inn in 1798.

  6. 15 de ene. de 2009 · Abstract. In 1814 Basil Montagu, by now an extremely busy member of the Chancery bar took up residence at 25 Bedford Square in fashionable Bloomsbury. Together with his wife, large family and...

  7. 8. Basil Montagu (1770-1851 ) wrote copiously on legal affairs. 9. Founded in 1776 by the Quaker Richard Wistar to lessen the hardships of prisoners, the Society was disbanded during the British occupation of Philadelphia. Disclosures concerning abominable prison conditions led to the rebirth of the Society in 1787.