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John Emerich Dalberg Acton, 1st Lord Acton: notes and extracts re the St Bartholomew's Day massacre, late 19th cent. Autograph, and in two other hands. In English, Italian, Portuguese, French, Latin, Spanish, and German., late 19th century

 File
Reference Code: GBR/0012/MS Add.5003

Scope and Contents

From the Fonds:

1. Family papers The papers contain material relating to the Actons of Naples: Commodore John Acton, his nephew J.F.E. Acton and H. Acton, a midshipman; material concerning the Dalberg family, particularly the family property on the Rhine, at Herrnsheim; a few manuscripts relating to Lord Granville; and the 1st Lord Acton's personal papers, including those covering his early years, his parliamentary career and interest in Ireland, relations with his family, and the period of his life spent in Cambridge. 2. Library development The collection includes a number of important manuscript series that were acquired by Acton for his library. These include the notes and lecture material of Ernst von Lasaulx, Acton's teacher in Munich in the early 1850s; manuscript and printed material for Acton's project 'The history of the papacy', collected during five years of travel on the continent; documents relating to the history of religion in modern times, particularly French religious history; and manuscripts concerning the history of England, particularly of Roman Catholicism. There are also catalogues of the library made by Acton and by librarians he employed to complete the work. 3. Transcript collection Acton and his copyists made a series of transcripts between 1865 and 1875 from archives held throughout Europe for 'The history of the papacy'. There are transcripts from archives in Vienna, Venice, Modena, Rome, Naples, Florence, Simancas, Paris, the British Museum, the Public Record Office, the Bodleian Library and other repositories. 4. Business archive The collection contains a large series of letters of the Paganelli and Cantucii families, merchants in Florence and Spain, dating predominantly from the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. It is not known how Acton came to acquire these papers. 5. Study projects and finished works Acton's research projects are represented in the collection by his card system and notebooks. The material covers 'The history of the papacy' project, including the Massacre of St Batholomew, the Inquisition, the Council of Trent, Henry VIII and James II; Acton's 'History of freedom'; his work with J.W. Cross on the latter's composition of The life of George Eliot; Acton's writing on Liberal Catholicism, including Church history and biographical material on his close friends Ignaz von Döllinger and Cardinal Newman; and Acton's time in Cambridge, including lectures on the French Revolution and modern history, and material concerning the Cambridge modern history. There are also notes and quotations on a variety of other subjects.

Dates

  • Creation: late 19th century

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

From the Fonds:

Unless restrictions apply, the collection is open for consultation by researchers using the Manuscripts Reading Room at Cambridge University Library. For further details on conditions governing access please contact mss@lib.cam.ac.uk. Information about opening hours and obtaining a Cambridge University Library reader's ticket is available from the Library's website (www.lib.cam.ac.uk).

Extent

1 archive box(es) (1 Box)

Language of Materials

English

Italian

Portuguese

French

Latin

Spanish; Castilian

German

Repository Details

Part of the Cambridge University Library Repository

Contact:
Cambridge University Library
West Road
Cambridge CB3 9DR United Kingdom