Home1815 Edition

ANTIQUARY

Volume 2 · 353 words · 1815 Edition

person who studies and searches after monuments and remains of antiquity; as old medals, books, statues, sculptures, and inscriptions; and, in general, all curious pieces that may afford any light into antiquity.

In the chief cities of Greece and Italy, there were persons of distinction called antiquaries, whose business it was to show strangers the antiquities of the place, to explain the ancient inscriptions, and to give them all the assistance they could in this way of learning.—Pausanias calls these antiquaries ξεγραπτοι. The Sicilians call them mylagogoi.

There was an ancient college of antiquaries erected in Ireland by Ollamh Fodha, 700 years before Christ, for composing a history of that country: And to this, say the Irish historians, it is owing that the history and antiquities of that kingdom may be traced back beyond those of most other nations.

There is a society of antiquaries in London, and another in Edinburgh, incorporated by the king's charter. See Society.

Antiquary is also used by ancient writers for the keeper of the antiquarium or cabinet of antiquities. The officer is otherwise called archæota, or antiquary of a king, a prince, a state or the like.

Henry VIII. gave John Leland the title of his antiquary; a title which, says the author of his life, nobody ever enjoyed besides himself. But the restriction, we suppose, was only intended to be understood in respect of the kings of England. M. Schott, we find, had the title of antiquary to the king of Prussia; P. Pedruzzi, that of antiquary of the duke of Parma; M. Galland resided some time in Turkey under the title of antiquary of the king of France.—The university of Oxford have still their antiquary, under the denomination of cyclus archivorum.—The kings of Sweden have been at great expenses in order to illustrate the antiquity of their country, having established an academy of antiquaries with this single view.—The office Antiquated of the ancient Irish antiquaries was to preserve the genealogies of the kings of Ireland, to correct the regal tables of succession, and deliver down the pedigree of every collateral branch of the royal family.