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Emily Warren (courtesan)

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Celebrated courtesan in 18th century London For other people named Emily Warren, see Emily Warren (disambiguation).
Emily Warren
Joshua Reynolds, Thaïs, 1781. Oil on canvas. Waddesdon Manor, Buckinghamshire.
NationalityBritish
Other namesEmily Pott
Emily Bertie
Emily Coventry
OccupationCourtesan
George Romney, Young woman believed to be Emily Pott. Oil on canvas, 1781.

Emily Warren, also known as Emily Bertie, Emily Coventry and Emily Pott, (died 1781 or 1782) was a celebrated courtesan in 18th century London who was painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds, George Romney, Nathaniel Dance, and the Scottish miniaturist Charles Shirreff, although the images of Warren by Dance and Shirreff are lost or unidentified. Warren figured prominently in the memoirs of William Hickey.

Biography

As a child, Warren wandered the streets with her blind beggar father. At the age of 12 Warren was "discovered" by Charlotte Hayes and trained to work as a prostitute in Hayes' "nunnery". Hayes taught her deportment and manners and she received "universal admiration". Hickey saw Warren around this time before departing for India in 1776. Reynolds probably first met Warren at Hayes' establishment in the late 1770s. He, and other artists, were known to visit London's brothels in search of models.

Warren left Hayes' establishment to become the mistress of Charles Greville, who commissioned Reynold to paint her as Thaïs. In 1778 she left Grenville to be "kept" by Hickey's friend, Captain Robert (Bob) Pott of the East India Company. He set her up in a house in Cork Street, with liveried servants, a yellow carriage and a box at the opera house.

In July 1780 Pott left for India and in the same month Hickey returned from the colony. Hickey and Warren resumed their relationship. To support his view that Warren was 'perfection', Hickey sought the opinion of Reynolds, "whom all the world allowed to be a competent judge" of beauty. Reynolds "declared every limb of hers perfect symmetry, and altogether he had never seen so faultless and finely formed a human figure."

Death

Pott returned from India and the couple married. They sailed off to India to start a new life, much to the disapproval of Pott's father. Between Madras and Calcutta Warren died of a fever. Pott was so distraught that he had her coffin placed in a small boat that was towed behind the ship. On arrival in Calcutta her body was interred in the holy burial ground by the Hooghly River. Potts commissioned an architect, Edoardo Tiretta, to construct a mausoleum for her over the grave at a cost of £3,000 and a column for an additional £1,000.

References

  1. Thaïs. Waddesdon Manor. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  2. ^ Cruickshank 2010.
  3. Emily Warren (Biographical details). British Museum. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  4. Emily Warren ('Emily Pott') ('Thaïs'). National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  5. "George Romney - Portrait of a Woman, Said to Be Emily Bertie Pott (died 1782)". The Metropolitan Museum of Art, i.e. The Met Museum. Retrieved 13 October 2018.
  6. Teale, Adrian (24 September 2013). "Courting the Courtesans". Erotic Review. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  7. Hickey 1782.
  8. Clee 2011, p. 118.
  9. Baetjer 2009, p. 128.
  10. Clee 2011, p. 119.
  11. ^ Williams 2007, p. 51.
  12. ^ "Pott, Emily (Miss)". The Garrick Club Collections. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  13. Farington 1924, p. 291.
  14. ^ Teal, Adrian (23 July 2013). "Fifty Shades of the Georgians: Bonkbusters Are Nothing New". HuffPost UK. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  15. Hickey 1782, p. 321.
  16. ^ The Gin Lane Gazette 1782, p. 1785.

Bibliography

External links

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