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Sacheverell Sitwell (1897–1988)

Author of British Architects and Craftsmen

80+ Works 879 Members 14 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Sacheverell Sitwell

Liszt (1934) 49 copies
Great Houses of Europe (1961) 48 copies
Fine Bird Books, 1700-1900 (1990) 40 copies
Spain (1950) 33 copies
Great Palaces (1964) 30 copies
Roumanian Journey (1992) 28 copies
Gothic Europe (1969) 24 copies
SOUTHERN BAROQUE ART (1927) 23 copies
The hunters and the hunted (1947) 23 copies
For Want of the Golden City (1973) 20 copies
Baroque and Rococo (1967) 16 copies
Mozart (1932) 14 copies
Portugal and Madeira (1954) 12 copies
Denmark (2011) 11 copies
Selected works (1950) 10 copies
Splendours and Miseries (1943) 10 copies
Southern Baroque revisited (1967) 10 copies
Truffle hunt (1953) 9 copies
Edinburgh (1948) 8 copies
Arabesque and honeycomb (1957) 7 copies
Selected poems (1948) 6 copies
Poor young people (1925) 5 copies
Cupid and the jacaranda (1952) 5 copies
Sacred and Profane Love (1940) 4 copies
Spanish Baroque Art (1931) 4 copies
Doctor Donne & Gargantua; (1974) 3 copies
TRIO. (1970) 3 copies
Antoine Watteau (1925) 3 copies
Hortus Sitwellianus (1984) 3 copies
Malta 3 copies
German Baroque Art (1927) 2 copies
German baroque sculpture (1938) 2 copies
Rudding Park 2 copies
Dear Miss Heber, An Eighteenth Century Correspondence (1937) — Introduction — 1 copy
An Indian Summer (1982) 1 copy
Far From My Home (1931) 1 copy

Associated Works

American Notes / Pictures from Italy (1846) — Introduction, some editions — 402 copies
The Penguin Book of Contemporary Verse (1950) — Contributor, some editions — 265 copies
Baron at the Ballet (1950) — Foreword — 36 copies
Fire of the Mind: A Self-Portrait (1976) — Foreword — 21 copies
Scottish Tales of Terror (1972) — Contributor — 19 copies
Franz Liszt: The Man and His Music (1970) — Contributor — 13 copies
Tropical Birds (1948) — Editor — 13 copies
The Bedside Lilliput (1950) — Photographer — 12 copies

Tagged

18th century (7) 19th century (35) 20th century (20) America (12) anthology (45) architecture (59) art (48) bibliography (10) biography (26) birds (18) botany (8) British (10) British literature (8) Charles Dickens (12) classic (10) classics (9) Dickens (16) eng (16) England (8) English (14) English literature (20) essays (16) Europe (15) fiction (27) history (38) Italy (30) Liszt (10) literature (38) memoir (15) monasticism (8) music (29) non-fiction (56) novel (8) poetry (128) sits (15) Spain (12) to-read (12) travel (90) travel writing (9) USA (20)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

One of the classic biographies of this imposing founder of romantic music. Liszt's influence spanned the nineteenth century, with some of his late music sounding like a precursor to the impressionist age.
 
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jwhenderson | Mar 14, 2024 |
Sacheverell Sitwell has a wealth of knowledge of European art and history that is apparent from almost every sentence. It's a book from another time and place (1950) written in a style that might put off some as being overly formal by today's standards. A stark contrast from Lonely Planet or other travel guides. It's almost like reading Shakespeare and that's part of the fun of this book. Most interesting for me was near the end of the book when he treks into Gypsy cave settlements in the caves of southern Spain.… (more)
 
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kropferama | Jan 1, 2023 |
http://www.mytwostotinki.com/?p=2538

It always amazes me how little we "Westerners" usually know about the culture and the history of South-Eastern Europe. And I am saying this even after sixteen years of Balkan experience.

It is therefore always a pleasure to read well-written travel accounts by authors that have the necessary curiosity, education and ability to transfer their knowledge to us readers. A good example is Roumanian Journey by Sacheverell Sitwell (the younger brother of Edith Sitwell, and an early member in Sir Oswald Mosley's New Party before Mosley turned it into a fascist movement.).

The court ceremonial that Sitwell is describing is truly strange:

„As late as 1818, there is an account by an English traveller of an audience with the reigning prince, at Bucharest, in which he is described as being carried into the room, in the old traditional manner, supported by the arm of a servant under each of his shoulders, as though he were too important a personage to walk. These were the manners and customs of the old Turkish court, or even of the Court of Pekin. It was remarked, too, that the Phanariot princes had no standing army. This was not allowed them. Their state consisted in a multiplicity of servants, and in a few heyducks or Albanians gorgeously arrayed. I am even told, by Prince Matila Ghyka, that a Phanariot Prince, of the Mavrojeni family, made his official entry into Bucharest riding in a sledge drawn by a pair of stags with gilded antlers.”

A classical book - the first edition appeared in 1938 - that belongs in each library of anyone with an interest in South-East European history and culture; and for readers of travel books as well. The edition I read has a foreword by Patrick Leigh Fermor, another expert on Romania. Travel literature at its best, until about ten pages to the end when the author is revealing his anti-Semitism.

If it was not for the more than doubtful remarks about the "Jewish problem" that made me cringe, this book would be one of the very best in this genre. As it is, it is still a great read - with the mentioned restriction.
… (more)
 
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Mytwostotinki | 1 other review | Mar 19, 2016 |
very important reference for bird antique bird prints
 
Flagged
antiqueart | Nov 24, 2013 |

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Works
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ISBNs
83
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