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 http://www.dovecotepress.com/autobiography-biography-529-0.html   

Anne Sebba at the launch of The Exiled Collector.

Anne Sebba at the launch of The Exiled Collector.

The Exiled Collector:William Bankes and the Making of an English Country House has just been republished by The Dovecote Press www.dovecotepress.com/

Please order direct from Publishers

 http://www.dovecotepress.com/autobiography-biography-529-0.html   

 

 

Synopsis
On 30 August 1841, William John Bankes, former Tory MP, pioneer Egyptologist and renowned traveller was caught in compromising circumstances with a guardsman in London’s Green Park.  Bankes paid a heavy price for his moment of madness: less than two weeks later, well aware that sodomy carried the death penalty, he fled into exile eventually settling in Venice.  The Government declared Bankes an outlaw - a vindictive and archaic procedure which entitled them to seize his house, Kingston Lacy in Dorset.

The Exiled Collector is the poignant story of how Bankes, friend of Byron and the Duke of Wellington, eventually turned his personal tragedy to posterity’s benefit.  Based in Venice, he continued to collect obsessively for a house he no longer owned. He found fulfilment through designing, commissioning and creating as well as collecting for the house he loved but was able to visit only in secret at the end of his life.  Based on extensive research from previously undiscovered archives, this is the first full biography of William Bankes.  It vividly recounts his dramatic life story, examines the psychology of collecting and the pain and creativity of exile and affords a revealing insight in the minds of a ruling elite in early Victorian Britain.

 

For Feature article on Kingston Lacy and William Bankes in the Bournemouth Echo please see PDF exiled_collector_article

 

This is a rich biography of a complex figure...The writing sparkles because Anne Sebba has seen the adventure in Bankes's life."

Christopher Lee

Literary Review July 2004

This wonderful book...Anne Sebba has written this record of exquisite taste and brutal suffering with equal measures of verve, tact and eloquence.
Edmund White
Anne Sebba's fascinating book is more than the portrait of another rich, gay dilettante in Venice buying up everything he can get his hands on, however: it is the portrait of an obsession - for collecting and for a house in which to house that collection."

Financial Times

3rd July 2004