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A George II style carved oak doorcase
20th Century, in the manner of William Kent, removed from a country estate in Buckinghamshire ,
the stiff-leaf convex moulded frieze flanked by corbels with leafy clasps, an architectural broken swan-neck pediment above and panelled jambs flanking the lambrequin moulded frame, the six-panelled door with raised and fielded panels, (the door blind to the reverse)
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Check-out other architectural salvages from the same interior (if still available): another doorcase 46257 a screen of columns 46258 , and a fire surround 46255
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John Pringle Nichol who, a Scottish Romantic astronomer, educator, and social reformer, who produced popular science books between 1846 and 1850. As the 5th Regius Professor of Astronomy at the University of Edinburgh , influenced the building of a large observatory beyond the city on Horselethill, paid for by the local citizens. In 1841, it was saved from financial collapse by the University. Part of the difficulties had arisen through Nichol's extravagance in purchasing unnecessarily expensive equipment. Eventually, Horselethill Observatory was kept in operation for 100 years. Nichol was a prolific writer and populariser of Astronomy; his books Contemplations on the Solar System and Views of the Architecture of the Heavens, the latter expanding on the Nebular Hypothesis, and one describing the discovery of Neptune£250 each -
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