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  1. 2 de abr. de 2024 · Samuel Pepys Cockerell. (1754-1827), Architect. Sitter in 1 portrait. Like. List Thumbnail. Sort by. Samuel Pepys Cockerell. by William Daniell, after George Dance. soft-ground etching, published 1854? (28 July 1793)

  2. 28 de dic. de 2020 · COCKERELL, SAMUEL PEPYS (1754–1827), architect, was son of John Cockerell of Bishop's Hall, Somersetshire, by Frances Jackson, his wife, and brother of Sir Charles Cockerell, M.P., of Sezincote, Gloucestershire, who was created a baronet in 1809. His mother was daughter of John Jackson, the nephew and heir of Samuel Pepys, and through her Cocke

  3. Samuel Pepys Cockerell (Londra, 1754 – 1827) è stato un architetto inglese. Figlio di John Cockerell e fratello di Charles Cockerell , è conosciuto principalmente per aver realizzato nel 1805 la Sezincote House nel Gloucestershire , le cui caratteristiche orientali ispirarono la costruzione del Royal Pavilion [2] .

  4. 6 de may. de 2021 · Samuel Pepys Cockerell (1844-1921). Estimate £1,000-£1,500. Cockerell was the youngest son of architect, archaeologist and writer Charles Robert Cockerell, RA, RIBA (1788-1863). He established a career as a sculptor, painter and like his father, a writer. The two watercolours by him in the sale record his time at Oxford, where he was at ...

  5. Sam’s father, who will live to be 79 will outlive all of his children except Paulina (“Pall”) and Sam. Sam will outlive all of his siblings, living to be 70 years old. Sam’s Parents: John. A tailor of London, afterwards of Brampton and Ellington, Hunts. Father of the Diarist. Baptised 14 Jan. 1600/1 at Impington.

  6. Samuel Pepys Cockerell (1753–1827) Subscribe to our newsletter. Newly added artworks, stories and chances to win prizes, delivered straight to your inbox every two weeks.

  7. John Cockerell, however, died in 1798, before the alterations were fully complete and the Sezincote estate passed to his brothers, Charles and Samuel Pepys and sister Elizabeth. In 1801, Charles Cockerell bought the shares of his siblings for a total of £38,000 and it was during his tenure that Sezincote was transformed into an ‘Indian House’.