单词 | antiquary |
释义 | antiquaryn.adj. A. n. I. Senses relating to the past or history. 1. a. A person who studies or is interested in the past or its remains; a person who studies or collects antiquities. Now typically used with reference to scholars of the 19th cent. or earlier, as distinguished from later archaeologists. Cf. antiquarian n.Although in early use often applied generally to any historian or scholar studying or recording the past, antiquary came to be particularly associated with those concerned with historical artefacts and other physical remains. In current use, it is frequently applied specifically to individuals whose work pre-dates the development of modern archaeological techniques of systematic excavation and recording, and sometimes carries depreciative overtones suggesting lack of rigour, analysis, or formal knowledge. N.E.D. (1885) regarded quot. 1635, and another c1571 example, as exemplifying a sense ‘a man of great age; an ancient’, but on reconsideration of the evidence, both quotations seem more likely to show this sense. ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [noun] > object from the past or antique > one who is interested in antiquary1566 antiquarian1595 philarchaist1652 man of cabinets1699 antiquitarian1720 antiquist1789 palaeophilist1822 palaeologist1828 archaista1861 palaeologian1894 1566 J. Martiall Replie to Calfhills Blasphemous Answer f. 59 Yowe make yower selfe so skillfull an antiquarie, and lerned in olde monumentes..and bring foorth but one president of scripture, and antiquitie. 1635 J. Taylor Life T. Parr sig. C2v Hee's in these times fill'd with Iniquity, No Antiquary, but Antiquity; For his Longeuity's of such extent, That hee's a living mortall Monument. a1677 I. Barrow Treat. Pope's Supremacy (1680) 136 Eusebius (the greatest Antiquary of the Old times). 1786 H. Walpole Vertue's Anecd. Painting (ed. 4) I. iv. 134 We antiquaries, who hold every thing worth preserving, merely because it has been preserved. 1863 D. Wilson Prehistoric Ann. Scotl. (ed. 2) I. i. iii. 86 Such evidences of primitive ages as have rewarded the researches of northern antiquaries. 1912 H. G. Aldis in Cambr. Hist. Eng. Lit. IX. xiii. 346 Brian Twyne, a diligent Oxford antiquary who had done much pioneer spade-work in the same field. 2002 N. Malcolm Aspects of Hobbes x. 317 Aubrey was..not a maggoty-headed antiquary but a thoroughly modern scientist. b. A person holding an official position as custodian or recorder of the antiquities of a nation, institution, etc.John Leland (c1503–52) was formerly thought to have been appointed to a position of King's Antiquary by Henry VIII, but it is now thought that no such post actually existed (see quot. 2004). ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [noun] > object from the past or antique > one who is interested in > official custodian of antiquary1601 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World II. xxxiv. vi. 493 Annius Fæcialis (another antiquarie or heralt at arms of Rome). [No equivalent to antiquarie in Pliny's Latin text; Du Pinet's French version has no equivalent either, but a marginal note: ou, heraut d'armes, ou Roy d'armes.] 1763 J. Brown Diss. Poetry & Music §8. 161 The approved Songs of the ancient Bards were preserved in the Custody of the King's Antiquary. 1860 Athenæum 1 Sept. 294/2 By the revised rule 5, the Academy provides itself with an antiquary. 2000 Independent (Nexis) 11 May 6 His association with it [sc. the Royal Academy of Arts] by no means ended with his formal retirement. He was made Honorary Archivist and Antiquary. 2004 Oxf. Dict. National Biogr. (Electronic ed.) 23 Sept. at Leland, John Based on his use of the term 'antiquarius', generations of scholars assumed that he had some sort of official position as 'king's antiquary'. This is not the case, and Leland seems to have appropriated the term in analogy with continental humanist practices. ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > [noun] > matters, customs, or events of earlier times antiquityc1487 antiquary1592 res gestae1936 1592 Greenes Groats-worth of Witte sig. B A Cittie,..the name is not mentioned in the Antiquarie. ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [noun] oldnessOE antiquity?c1450 agednessa1475 ancienty1524 continuance1528 ancientness1537 anciency1549 hoariness1580 primitiveness1644 antiquary1655 vetustness1727 primitivity1759 vetusty1870 1655 Woodall's Surgeons Mate (new ed.) 235 Of the antiquary, the first inventers, and worthinesse of the excellent Art of Alchymy. 4. Architecture and Decorative Arts. A grotesque or fantastic ornamental representation of a person, animal, or thing; = antic n. 1. Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > plastic art > sculpture or carving > [noun] > a sculpture or carving > group or spec. subject antic1532 Our Lady Piety1533 drapery1552 antiquary1573 urn1653 story1657 Pietàc1660 gigantomachy1820 set piece1846 terminal1865 wheatear1882 protome1886 protoma1894 koruru1897 blemya1915 Lincoln imp1926 1573 in J. Nichols Progresses Queen Elizabeth (1823) I. 378 Three bolles..chased in the bottomes with antiquaries and fishes. Of or relating to antiquity; ancient, antique. Cf. antiquarian adj. Obsolete.In quot. 1599 with reference to the Antiquarum Lectiones (1516) of Caelius Rhodiginus (Lodovico Ricchieri). ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [adjective] > ancient or of early origin oldeOE olden daysa1400 for-oldc1400 ancient1475 (as) old as Adama1599 antiquary1599 high1601 primal1604 hoary1609 grandeval1650 Noachal1661 patriarchal1806 (as) old as the hills1819 world-old1837 eld1854 age-old1860 far-back1869 Noachian1874 pornial1883 1599 tr. Historia de Donne Famose sig. E He in his foorth volume of Antiquarie lections, numbering learned women nameth Ione, what saith he? 1609 W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida ii. iii. 246 Here's Nestor, Instructed by the antiquary times. View more context for this quotation 1877 M. Oliphant Carita III. xli. 190 Some kind of antiquary courtship. 1919 Eccles. Rev. 61 265 They had treasures which we still use, not merely as antiquary relics, but as sources of encyclopedic information. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2021; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < n.adj.1566 |
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