David Jones (Q58553): Difference between revisions

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Walter David Michael Jones
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Walter David Jones
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David Michael Jones (1895-1974)
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David Jones (1895-1974)
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David Michael Jones
Property / date of death: 28 October 1974 / reference
 
Property / date of death: 28 October 1974 / reference
 
Property / date of death: 28 October 1974 / reference
 
Property / date of death: 28 October 1974 / reference
 
Property / date of death: 28 October 1974 / reference
 
Property / date of birth: 1 November 1895Gregorian / reference
 
Property / date of birth: 1 November 1895Gregorian / reference
 
Property / date of birth: 1 November 1895Gregorian / reference
 
Property / date of birth: 1 November 1895Gregorian / reference
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-criticism-and-interpretation / rank
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-archives / rank
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-diaries / rank
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-correspondence / rank
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-finance-personal / rank
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-in-parenthesis / rank
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-anathemata / rank
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-anathemata / rank
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-anathemata / qualifier
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-archives / rank
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-correspondence / rank
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-correspondence / qualifier
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-criticism-and-interpretation / rank
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-criticism-and-interpretation / qualifier
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-diaries / rank
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-diaries / qualifier
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-finance-personal / rank
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-finance-personal / qualifier
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-in-parenthesis / rank
 
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Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: jones-david-1895-1974-in-parenthesis / qualifier
 
Property / place of death
 
Property / place of death: Harrow / rank
 
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Property / place of death: Harrow / reference
 
Property / place of birth
 
Property / place of birth: Brockley / rank
 
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Property / Welsh Biography ID (EN)
 
Property / Welsh Biography ID (EN): s10-JONE-MIC-1895 / rank
 
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Property / Welsh Biography ID (CY)
 
Property / Welsh Biography ID (CY): c10-JONE-MIC-1895 / rank
 
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Property / Wikimedia Commons media
 
Property / Wikimedia Commons media: David jones.jpg / rank
 
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Property / VIAF ID
 
Property / VIAF ID: 121994189 / rank
 
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Property / father
 
Property / father: James Jones / rank
 
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Property / ISNI ID
 
Property / ISNI ID: 0000 0001 1477 2034 / rank
 
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Property / Library of Congress authority ID
 
Property / Library of Congress authority ID: n50039958 / rank
 
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Property / language spoken or written
 
Property / language spoken or written: English / rank
 
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Property / short biography
 
David Jones (1895-1974) was an accomplished artist who produced watercolours, illustrations and inscriptions, and who also gained acclaim as a poet, especially as the author of In Parenthesis in 1937, and the long prose poem The Anathemata in 1952.David Walter Jones was born in Brockley, Kent, on 1 November 1895. His mother, Alice Ann Bradshaw, was from London, and his father, James Jones, was originally from Holywell, Flintshire. He attended the Camberwell School of Art from 1910-1914, and the Westminster School of Art from 1919-1921.He joined the London Welsh Battalion of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers in 1915 and served as a private with them until 1918. This experience had a profound effect on him, and his first book, In Parenthesis (1937), is an epic war poem which deals with the period he spent in France.In 1921 he was received into the Roman Catholic Church, adopting Michael as a middle name. This was a defining moment in his life and work. In 1924 he became engaged to Petra Gill and often visited the family at Capel y ffin, near Abergavenny. His engagement with Petra was broken off in 1927 and subsequently he never married. In 1937 Faber published In Parenthesis, which T. S. Eliot regarded as 'a work of genius'. He was awarded the Hawthornden prize for it in 1938.He was based at the parental home at Brockley until his mother's death in 1937. He then lived in Notting Hill, and from about 1946 lived in Harrow on the Hill. In 1970 he fell ill after breaking a bone in his hip and resided at Calvary Nursing Home, Harrow until his death in 1974.A volume of essays Epoch and Artist was published by Faber in 1959, followed by The Fatigue (1965), The Tribune's Visitations (1969) and The Introduction to The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1972). The Sleeping Lord (1974) and The Roman Quarry (1981) were published posthumously.In 1955 he was awarded the CBE, and also the Harriet Monroe memorial prize. In 1960 he was awarded the degree of D. Litt from The University of Wales and became both Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a member of the Royal Watercolour Society in 1961. He was awarded the Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales Gold medal in 1964 and the Welsh Arts Council Literature Prize in 1969.
Property / short biography: David Jones (1895-1974) was an accomplished artist who produced watercolours, illustrations and inscriptions, and who also gained acclaim as a poet, especially as the author of In Parenthesis in 1937, and the long prose poem The Anathemata in 1952.David Walter Jones was born in Brockley, Kent, on 1 November 1895. His mother, Alice Ann Bradshaw, was from London, and his father, James Jones, was originally from Holywell, Flintshire. He attended the Camberwell School of Art from 1910-1914, and the Westminster School of Art from 1919-1921.He joined the London Welsh Battalion of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers in 1915 and served as a private with them until 1918. This experience had a profound effect on him, and his first book, In Parenthesis (1937), is an epic war poem which deals with the period he spent in France.In 1921 he was received into the Roman Catholic Church, adopting Michael as a middle name. This was a defining moment in his life and work. In 1924 he became engaged to Petra Gill and often visited the family at Capel y ffin, near Abergavenny. His engagement with Petra was broken off in 1927 and subsequently he never married. In 1937 Faber published In Parenthesis, which T. S. Eliot regarded as 'a work of genius'. He was awarded the Hawthornden prize for it in 1938.He was based at the parental home at Brockley until his mother's death in 1937. He then lived in Notting Hill, and from about 1946 lived in Harrow on the Hill. In 1970 he fell ill after breaking a bone in his hip and resided at Calvary Nursing Home, Harrow until his death in 1974.A volume of essays Epoch and Artist was published by Faber in 1959, followed by The Fatigue (1965), The Tribune's Visitations (1969) and The Introduction to The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1972). The Sleeping Lord (1974) and The Roman Quarry (1981) were published posthumously.In 1955 he was awarded the CBE, and also the Harriet Monroe memorial prize. In 1960 he was awarded the degree of D. Litt from The University of Wales and became both Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a member of the Royal Watercolour Society in 1961. He was awarded the Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales Gold medal in 1964 and the Welsh Arts Council Literature Prize in 1969. / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / short biography: David Jones (1895-1974) was an accomplished artist who produced watercolours, illustrations and inscriptions, and who also gained acclaim as a poet, especially as the author of In Parenthesis in 1937, and the long prose poem The Anathemata in 1952.David Walter Jones was born in Brockley, Kent, on 1 November 1895. His mother, Alice Ann Bradshaw, was from London, and his father, James Jones, was originally from Holywell, Flintshire. He attended the Camberwell School of Art from 1910-1914, and the Westminster School of Art from 1919-1921.He joined the London Welsh Battalion of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers in 1915 and served as a private with them until 1918. This experience had a profound effect on him, and his first book, In Parenthesis (1937), is an epic war poem which deals with the period he spent in France.In 1921 he was received into the Roman Catholic Church, adopting Michael as a middle name. This was a defining moment in his life and work. In 1924 he became engaged to Petra Gill and often visited the family at Capel y ffin, near Abergavenny. His engagement with Petra was broken off in 1927 and subsequently he never married. In 1937 Faber published In Parenthesis, which T. S. Eliot regarded as 'a work of genius'. He was awarded the Hawthornden prize for it in 1938.He was based at the parental home at Brockley until his mother's death in 1937. He then lived in Notting Hill, and from about 1946 lived in Harrow on the Hill. In 1970 he fell ill after breaking a bone in his hip and resided at Calvary Nursing Home, Harrow until his death in 1974.A volume of essays Epoch and Artist was published by Faber in 1959, followed by The Fatigue (1965), The Tribune's Visitations (1969) and The Introduction to The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1972). The Sleeping Lord (1974) and The Roman Quarry (1981) were published posthumously.In 1955 he was awarded the CBE, and also the Harriet Monroe memorial prize. In 1960 he was awarded the degree of D. Litt from The University of Wales and became both Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a member of the Royal Watercolour Society in 1961. He was awarded the Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales Gold medal in 1964 and the Welsh Arts Council Literature Prize in 1969. / qualifier
 

Latest revision as of 09:20, 11 December 2023

painter and British modernist poet (1895-1974)
  • Walter David Michael Jones
  • Walter David Jones
  • David Michael Jones (1895-1974)
  • David Jones (1895-1974)
  • David Michael Jones
Language Label Description Also known as
English
David Jones
painter and British modernist poet (1895-1974)
  • Walter David Michael Jones
  • Walter David Jones
  • David Michael Jones (1895-1974)
  • David Jones (1895-1974)
  • David Michael Jones

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David Jones (1895-1974) was an accomplished artist who produced watercolours, illustrations and inscriptions, and who also gained acclaim as a poet, especially as the author of In Parenthesis in 1937, and the long prose poem The Anathemata in 1952.David Walter Jones was born in Brockley, Kent, on 1 November 1895. His mother, Alice Ann Bradshaw, was from London, and his father, James Jones, was originally from Holywell, Flintshire. He attended the Camberwell School of Art from 1910-1914, and the Westminster School of Art from 1919-1921.He joined the London Welsh Battalion of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers in 1915 and served as a private with them until 1918. This experience had a profound effect on him, and his first book, In Parenthesis (1937), is an epic war poem which deals with the period he spent in France.In 1921 he was received into the Roman Catholic Church, adopting Michael as a middle name. This was a defining moment in his life and work. In 1924 he became engaged to Petra Gill and often visited the family at Capel y ffin, near Abergavenny. His engagement with Petra was broken off in 1927 and subsequently he never married. In 1937 Faber published In Parenthesis, which T. S. Eliot regarded as 'a work of genius'. He was awarded the Hawthornden prize for it in 1938.He was based at the parental home at Brockley until his mother's death in 1937. He then lived in Notting Hill, and from about 1946 lived in Harrow on the Hill. In 1970 he fell ill after breaking a bone in his hip and resided at Calvary Nursing Home, Harrow until his death in 1974.A volume of essays Epoch and Artist was published by Faber in 1959, followed by The Fatigue (1965), The Tribune's Visitations (1969) and The Introduction to The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1972). The Sleeping Lord (1974) and The Roman Quarry (1981) were published posthumously.In 1955 he was awarded the CBE, and also the Harriet Monroe memorial prize. In 1960 he was awarded the degree of D. Litt from The University of Wales and became both Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a member of the Royal Watercolour Society in 1961. He was awarded the Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales Gold medal in 1964 and the Welsh Arts Council Literature Prize in 1969.
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