Samuel Pepys [ Art and Literature / Politics ]
… his changing patterns of sociability across his life. People > Art and Literature People > Politics Mots-clés Diaries Family Hospitality Navy Patronage Samuel Pepys’s impressive social rise, chronicled in his diary of the 1660s, owed much … was being seen to fulfil his obligation as kin and as – by 1663 – the most influential male on his mother’s side of the family. He saw cause for self-reproach when the exchange of reciprocal hospitality broke down because of his … The Coffee House: A Cultural History (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004), p. 57; Karl E. Westhauser, ‘Friendship and Family in Early Modern England: The Sociability of Adam Eyre and Samuel Pepys’, Journal of Social History (vol. 27, no. …
Diaries | Family | Hospitality | Navy | Patronage
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