Difference between revisions of "George Rex"
(Created page with "(1765-1839) Businessman and dramatist. * Mysterious character, who claimed to be the illegitimate son of King George III of England. He married a Quaker, Hannah Lightfoot and th...") |
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− | (1765-1839) | + | [[George Rex]] (1765-1839) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Rex]. Businessman and dramatist. |
+ | == Biography == | ||
+ | Mysterious character, who claimed to be the illegitimate son of King George III of England. He married a Quaker, Hannah Lightfoot and the couple had 13 children, including [[Frederick Rex]]. Rex bought Melkhoutkraal in Knysna in 1804, opening up the river in order to send timber out by sea. lived in Grahamstown and Knysna. | ||
+ | |||
+ | George was apparently a friend of [[Andrew Geddes Bain]], with whom (according to Bosman, 1928, Fletcher, 1994, et al.) he is reputed to have co-written the sketch in verse and prose called ''[[Kaatje Kekkelbek or Life Among the Hottentots]]'', the first publically performed piece of dramatic writing in Afrikaans (Grahamstown 25 October 1838). However, according to Binge (1969) the family tradition indicates that his son [[Frederick Rex]] (qv) might have been the co-author in question. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Sources == | ||
+ | [[ESAT Bibliography Fla-Fly|Fletcher]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Return to == | ||
Return to [[ESAT Personalities R]] | Return to [[ESAT Personalities R]] | ||
Revision as of 17:19, 28 September 2019
George Rex (1765-1839) [1]. Businessman and dramatist.
Biography
Mysterious character, who claimed to be the illegitimate son of King George III of England. He married a Quaker, Hannah Lightfoot and the couple had 13 children, including Frederick Rex. Rex bought Melkhoutkraal in Knysna in 1804, opening up the river in order to send timber out by sea. lived in Grahamstown and Knysna.
George was apparently a friend of Andrew Geddes Bain, with whom (according to Bosman, 1928, Fletcher, 1994, et al.) he is reputed to have co-written the sketch in verse and prose called Kaatje Kekkelbek or Life Among the Hottentots, the first publically performed piece of dramatic writing in Afrikaans (Grahamstown 25 October 1838). However, according to Binge (1969) the family tradition indicates that his son Frederick Rex (qv) might have been the co-author in question.
Sources
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