Thomas Gilliland Explained

Thomas Gilliland (fl. 1804–1837) was a combative British journalist and theatre critic.[1] According to attack pieces in The Satirist, or Monthly Meteor, he was "countenanced" by Matthew "Monk" Lewis and Thomas Moore,[1] [2] and frequented the green room of Drury Lane Theatre until Charles Mathews and other actors complained he was spying for scandalmonger Anthony Pasquin.[1] [3] Gilliland's 1806 pamphlet Diamond cut Diamond defended the future George IV, then Prince of Wales, against Nathaniel Jefferys's attack, for which the Prince gave him 500 guineas.[4] In 1809, Mary Anne Clarke, the royal mistress of Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany was about to publish scandalous Memoirs, until Gilliland helped arrange a deal to buy and destroy the publishers' copies.[5] Many attacks on the Duke were published the same year and erroneously rumoured to have been Clarke's memoirs. In 1810 Gilliland collaborated on The Rival Princes, a response to the attacks published in Clarke's name.[6]

In 1816 the Prince of Wales, now Prince Regent, granted Gilliland an annuity of £400, formalised by a contract of June 1817.[7] In 1827, Gilliland bought what he claimed was a portrait of Shakespeare, an identification not otherwise supported.[8]

Edmund Henry Barker's Literary Anecdotes and Contemporary Reminiscences includes several he heard from Gilliland when both were imprisoned for debt in the Fleet in 1837.[9]

Works

Gilliland wrote:

The engraver John Thomas Smith called Gilliland "my worthy friend" and "author of the celebrated pamphlet of 'Diamond cut Diamond,' and, I believe, about sixteen or seventeen others in defence and support of the English government".[14]

References

Sources

Citations

Notes and References

  1. Gilliland, Thomas. 21. Knight . John Joseph.
  2. [Review of] The Trap ]. The Satirist, or Monthly Meteor . December 1808 . III . iv . 532–540: 534 . 8 December 2019.
  3. [Review of] The Dramatic Mirror ]. The Satirist, or Monthly Meteor . January 1808 . I . iii . 418–424: 420 . 8 December 2019. Manners . George . Jerdan . William .
  4. Breashears 2012 p.9
  5. Breashears 2012 pp.9–10
  6. Breashears 2012 p.17
  7. Breashears 2012 p.25
  8. Book: Wivell . Abraham . A supplement to An inquiry into the history, authenticity, & characteristics of the Shakspeare portraits, .. . 1827 . Simpkin and Marshall . London . 12–15 . https://archive.org/details/supplementtoinqu00wiverich/page/n37 . 7 December 2019 . The Gilliland Portrait.
    Book: Norris . Joseph Parker . The portraits of Shakespeare . 1885 . R. M. Lindsay . Philadelphia . 210 . https://archive.org/details/portraitsofshake00norrrich/page/n346 . 7 December 2019 . The Gilliland Portrait.
  9. Spielmann . Marion Harry Alexander . Shakespeare, William/The Portraits of Shakespeare . 24 . 791 . The 'Rendelsham' and 'Crooks' portraits also belong to the category of capital paintings representing some one other than Shakespeare; and the same may be hazarded of ... the 'Gilliland portrait' (an old man's head impudently advanced)[.].
  10. Breashears 2012 p.10; Book: Barker . Edmund Henry . Literary Anecdotes and Contemporary Reminiscences of Professor Porson and Others . 1852 . J.R. Smith . London . 88–91 . I . 7 December 2019 . en.
  11. Monthly Catalogue, Art. 38: [Review of] Elbow Room ]. The Critical Review, or, Annals of Literature . HathiTrust . May 1805 . s3 v5 . 1 . 106 . 8 December 2019 . en.
  12. Breashears 2012 fn.26
  13. Book: A Catalogue of Books Lately Published by C. Chapple . 10–11, No.44 . 6 December 2019. MacCallum . Pierre Franc . 1810 .
  14. Web site: Works citing The Dramatic Mirror . Google Scholar . 8 December 2019.
  15. Book: Smith . John Thomas . Nollekens and His Times: A Life of that Celebrated Sculptor and Memoirs of Several Contemporary Artists, from the Time of Roubiliac, Hogarth and Reynolds to that of Fuseli, Flaxman and Blake . 1829 . Colburn . 311, fn . 7 December 2019 . en.