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Edward Henry Corbould, R.I. (5 December 1815 in London – 18 January 1905 in London) was a British artist, noted as a historical painter and artist in water colour. ==Life== Born in London, he was son of Henry Corbould and grandson of Richard Corbould, both painters. He was a pupil of Henry Sass, and a student at the Royal Academy. In 1842 his watercolour of ''The Woman taken in Adultery'' was purchased by Albert, Prince Consort, and nine years later he was appointed instructor of historical painting to the Royal Family. He continued for twenty-one years teaching its members.〔''Dictionary of National Biography'', Corbould, Edward Henry (1815–1905), water-colour painter, by A. M. Hind. Published 1912.〕 Corbould married three times:〔 #On 28 September 1839 to Fanny Jemima (died 1850), daughter of the engraver Charles Heath, by whom he had three daughters, one of whom, Isabel Fanny (Mrs. G. H. Heywood), has two daughters who are artists, Mrs. Eveline Corbould-Ellis and Mrs. Weatherley; #On 7 August 1851 to Anne Middleton Wilson (died 1866), by whom he had two sons, Ridley Edward Arthur Lamothe (1854–1887) and Victor Albert Louis Edward (born 1866); #On 15 January 1868 to Anne Melis Sanders, by whom he had one son and one daughter. Corbould died at Kensington on 18 January 1905.〔 He has a memorial tablet in St Mary Abbots church in Kensington, London. His grandson was the noted designer Leonard Wyburd.〔"Mr. Leonard Wyburd", correspondence, ''The Times'', 31 January 1958, p. 13.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Edward Henry Corbould」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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