Mostly bibliographical and typographical.

Lords Hansard, 5 Mar 2010: Column 1728. Asim, Jabari, 'Dr. Writer, composer, shopkeeper and abolitionist, Ignatius Sancho was celebrated in the late 18th-century as a man of letters, a social reformer and an […] Online at http://www.myajc.com/news/vivian-vast-collection-books-anchor-library-his-honor/KfDUsnwGyj9WBXqqnQC15O/. Levin, Carole, 'From Leo Africanus to Ignatius Sancho: Backgrounds and Echoes to Othello.' Pethers, Matthew J., 'Talking Books, Selling Selves: Rereading the Politics of Olaudah Equiano’s Interesting Narrative', American Studies, 48:1 (Spring 2007): 101-134. The Letters of Ignatius Sancho, a new edition, based on the 1803 5th edn., with an introduction, notes and bibliography, edited by Paul Edwards and Polly Rewt (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1994).

Online at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2017/06/26/does-handwriting-mark-great-briton/. Sancho is discussed on pp.

175-193. Online at http://www.deccanchronicle.com/lifestyle/viral-and-trending/290617/now-your-handwriting-may-reveal-who-you-really-are.html. 57-66. Read this article online.

See especially pp. 118-123 and, especially, pp. Carey, Brycchan, ‘“The worse than Negro barbarity of the populace”: Ignatius Sancho witnesses the Gordon Riots’, in The Gordon Riots and British Culture, ed Ian Haywood (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2011), pp. Margaretta Jolly (London: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2001), II, pp. 117-18. Click here for more information. A review of The Letters of Laurence Sterne which takes note of the correspondence between Sterne and Sancho. This is a scholarly anti-racist text written at a time when few people admitted that there was racism in British society. Being the Correspondence of Richard Dennison Cumberland and George Cumberland between the Years 1771 and 1784 (London: Martin Secker, 1912), p.267. A Journal of the Arts in Africa (1970): 20-30. Walvin's early work is now dated. Gbadamosi, Raimi, 'Ignatius Sancho', Third Text: Critical Perspectives on Contemporary Art and Culture, 11:40 (1997): 103-5. The life of Sancho retold in the context of Sancho's correspondence with Sterne. The Sancho selection at pp. The main discussion is at pp. Ogude, S.E., Genius in Bondage: A Study of the Origins of African Literature in English (Ile-Ife, Nigeria: University of Ife Press, 1983). There is a typographical error which ascribes his Letters to Quobna Ottobah Cugoano.

Mostly bibliographical and typographical. David Dabydeen (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1985), pp. London: printed for C. & S. Thompson, no. 2, p.158 and Vol.

This sentimental novel does not specifically mention Sancho, but the character of Shirna Cambo is clearly modelled on him.

'Gillespie', 'Some Old Tobacconists', Tobacco, 90 (June 1888): 156-8. Pettit, Harry, 'Does YOUR handwriting make you a "Great Briton"?' Descargues, Madeleine, 'Ignatius Sancho's Letters', The Shandean: An Annual Devoted to Laurence Sterne and His Works, 3 (1991). Sancho (erroneously) conjectured to have sat for Hogarth. Radio documentary examing Sancho's legacy as a composer and mucician. The Sancho material is at p. 61 and pp. 17-36. 144–61. Sancho is mentioned frequently throughout the book. Junius P. Rodriguez, 3 vols (Armonk, NY: M.E. Letters of the Late Ignatius Sancho: An African, to which are Prefixed, Memoirs of his Life, 3rd edn., 2 vols (London: John Nichols, 1784). 96-7.

John Lord Montagu of Boughton. 68-9, 100.

It rewrites the Jekyll biography, but in a very different style. Oglander quotes her letter on the subject at pp. Add MS 89077. and a Brother? 1 October 2020, 10:39. Sancho briefly mentioned, with a copy of the engraving of his portrait. Sancho's Letters given as an example of 'African capacity'. The Town and Country Magazine; or, Universal Repository of Knowledge, Instruction and Entertainment, 16 (February 1784) 99-100. Sharpe, 2007), II, pp. Not yet examined. ', in The Deccan Chronicle, 29 June 2017. Not yet examined. A short pamphlet taking issue with Keith Sandiford and others. Ignatius Sancho Homework Help Questions. Black, Clementine, ed., The Cumberland Letters. Chalmers, Alexander, The General Biographical Dictionary (London, 1812-1817). Valuable examination of Sancho in the context of the sentimental novel and in the context of his correspondence with Laurence Sterne. [c. 1767]. Notes and Queries, 154 (1928): 138 and 174. The character Ignatius Alexander in this historical novel is in part inspired by Ignatius Sancho. [More information from Palgrave Macmillan]. More information from Cambridge University Press, Joseph, Paterson, Sancho - An Act of Remembrance (London: Oberon Modern Plays, 2011).

Sancho briefly mentioned.

370-3. Wood, Marcus, Blind Memory: Visual Representations of Slavery in England and America, 1780-1865, (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2000). 77-109 is generous, with excellent footnotes. Minuets, Cotillons & Country Dances for the Violin, Mandolin, German Flute, & Harpsichord Composed by an African Most Humbly Inscribed to his Grace Henry Duke of Buccleugh, &c, &c, &c. London. A letter from William Whitehead to George Harcourt which mentions Sancho. It includes 2 published volumes, 23 manuscript items, and 1 facsimile letter. Grégoire, Henri Babtiste (Abbé Grégoire), De La Littérature Des Nègres, ou, Recherces sur leur facultés intellectuelles, leur qualitiés Morales et leur littérature; Suivies de Notices sur la vie et les ouvrages des Nègres qui se sont distingués dans les Sciences, les Lettres et les Arts, (Paris: Maradan, 1808). Sancho briefly discussed on p. 126. More information from Pickering and Chatto.

Wright, Josephine R.B., 'Ignatius Sancho' in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd edn, ed.

'New Acquisitions: Sancho and Gainsborough', in What’s on at Gainsborough’s House: June-October 2019 (Leaflet), June 2019.

M., 'Ignatius Sancho (1729-1789)' in The Encyclopedia of Emancipation and Abolition in the Transatlantic World, ed. )": A Quotation from Edward Young Identified in Ignatius Sancho's Letters of the Late Ignatius Sancho, An African' in Notes and Queries, (December 2007): 482. Contains a chapter; 'Ignatius Sancho and Laurence Sterne: The Measure of Benevolence and the "Cult of Sensibility"' which progresses an interesting, if uncontroversial, reading of Sancho and his place in the world of Sternian sensibility.

Dabydeen, David, and Nana Wilson-Tagoe, A Reader's Guide to Westindian and Black British Literature, 2nd edn, revised (London: Hansib Publications, 1997). This is a revised edition of Little Truths better than great Fables written by William Darton in 1788. Argues that Joseph Jekyll's Life of Ignatius Sancho is more a literary than an historical document.

Sancho briefly mentioned on p. 141. Ramdin, Ron, The Making of the Black Working Class in Britain (Aldershot: Gower, 1987), p. 10. 277-325. I have included all the titles I know of regardless of their quality or accessibility. Sidney Lee's article on Sancho appeared in the first edition of the dictionary which was completed in 1900.

One of the first texts of the Sancho renaissance.

More information from Stanford University Press. Nichols, John and Ireland, John, eds., Hogarth's Works: With Life and Anecdotal Descriptions of His Pictures, 3 vols (London: Chatto and Windus, 1874), vol. Chiles, Katy L., Transformable Race: Surprising Metamorphoses in the Literature of Early America (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), Sancho very briefly mentioned on p. 32. (Brooklyn: Thomas Kirk, 1810). 2, p.182. 252-260. 138–54. All the essays in this collection are excellent. Carey, Brycchan, British Abolitionism and the Rhetoric of Sensibility: Writing, Sentiment,and Slavery, 1760-1807 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005). Online at http://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/how-tell-your-handwriting-makes-13242989. Sancho is discussed at pp. Available from: Amazon.com (USA) | Amazon.co.uk (UK). An important letter from William Stevenson describing Sancho. In Search of the Black Mozart, presented by Chi-chi Nwanoku.

Pamphlet, written by Thomas Clarkson's tutor, in which Sancho is recognised as a 'rational and moral writer'. Chalmers, Alexander, A New and General Biographical Dictionary (London, 1795). Brief discussion of Sancho's correspondence with Laurence Sterne. ed. The Sancho material can be found at pp. The Sancho material is at pp. Ellis, Markman, The Politics of Sensibility: Race, Gender and Commerce in the Sentimental Novel (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996). See pp. Bentley, Elizabeth, 'On the Abolition of the African Slave Trade. Six letters are reproduced, with notes, on pages 24-38. Sancho discussed at pp. George Cumberland praises Sancho in a letter written in 1780.

Sandhu, Sukhdev, 'Ignatius Sancho and Laurence Sterne', Research in African Literature 29, No 4 (Winter 1998): 88-105.

[Download this article], Carey, Brycchan, '"The hellish means of Killing and Kidnapping": Ignatius Sancho and the Campaign Against the "abominable traffic for slaves"', in Discourses of Slavery and Abolition: Britain and its Colonies, 1760-1838, eds. Charles Ignatius Sancho was a British composer, actor, and writer. I have organised the information under the following headings. It can be downloaded from iTunes, or ordered from: Amazon.com (USA) | Amazon.co.uk (UK). The Gainsborough House Museum in Sudbury, Suffolk, announces its purchase of a copy, in miniature, of the Thomas Gainsborough portrait of Sancho, acquired jointly with the National Portrait Gallery.

The first chapter of this important study of Black British writing from the age of slavery examines Sancho's 'posthumous literary celebrity' as well as Sancho's more private identity, as revealed in his manuscript letters. It includes considerable literary, historical and visual material on Sancho and his historical background as well as a unique CD recording of his music. Sancho discussed in the context of Sternean abolitionist writing. for the Black Heritage Library Collection (Freeport, New York: Books for Libraries Press, 1971). Dickson, William, Letters on Slavery (London, 1792), pp.