£400
Frederick Buck (1771-1840)
Miniature portrait of Sir Broderick Chinnery Bart M.P. (1742-1808)
watercolour on ivory
6.5 x 5.3cm, gold frame with hairwork back CITES Submission reference NQ7D4VC2
Sir Broderick Chinnery, 1st Baronet (1742-1808), was an Irish politician and baronet.
He was the fourth son of Reverend George Chinnery and his wife Eleanor Whitfield, daughter of William Whitfield. Chinnery was barrister and became High Sheriff of County Cork in 1786. He sat as Member of Parliament for Castlemartyr from 1783 to 1790. Subsequently he represented Bandonbridge in the Irish House of Commons until the Act of Union in 1801 and thereafter Bandon in the Parliament of the United Kingdom until 1806. On 29 August 1799, Chinnery was created a Baronet, of Flintfield, in the County of Cork.
Escutcheon of the Chinnery baronets of Flintfield
In February 1768, he married firstly his second cousin Margaret Chinnery, daughter of Nicholas Chinnery. They had three daughters and three sons. Margaret died in 1783, and Chinnery married secondly Alice Ball, fourth daughter of Robert Ball on 2 July 1789. He had two sons and two daughters by his second wife. Chinnery was succeeded in the baronetcy by Broderick, his eldest and only surviving son of his first marriage.
Frederick Buck (1771-1840)
Miniature portrait of Sir Broderick Chinnery Bart M.P. (1742-1808)
watercolour on ivory
6.5 x 5.3cm, gold frame with hairwork back CITES Submission reference NQ7D4VC2
Sir Broderick Chinnery, 1st Baronet (1742-1808), was an Irish politician and baronet.
He was the fourth son of Reverend George Chinnery and his wife Eleanor Whitfield, daughter of William Whitfield. Chinnery was barrister and became High Sheriff of County Cork in 1786. He sat as Member of Parliament for Castlemartyr from 1783 to 1790. Subsequently he represented Bandonbridge in the Irish House of Commons until the Act of Union in 1801 and thereafter Bandon in the Parliament of the United Kingdom until 1806. On 29 August 1799, Chinnery was created a Baronet, of Flintfield, in the County of Cork.
Escutcheon of the Chinnery baronets of Flintfield
In February 1768, he married firstly his second cousin Margaret Chinnery, daughter of Nicholas Chinnery. They had three daughters and three sons. Margaret died in 1783, and Chinnery married secondly Alice Ball, fourth daughter of Robert Ball on 2 July 1789. He had two sons and two daughters by his second wife. Chinnery was succeeded in the baronetcy by Broderick, his eldest and only surviving son of his first marriage.TRUEIn good clean condition with no faults noted, gold frame with possibly later elaborate hair work back, old hand inscribed label giving details of the sitter
Fees apply to the hammer price:
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33.6% inc VAT*
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30.00% inc VAT*