The Digital Ark: Early Modern Collections of Curiosities in England and Scotland, 1580-1700

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Elizabeth Bland (c.1660 - c. 1712)

Alias Elizabeth Fisher

Hebraist. According to the OED, "Elizabeth Bland is known only by a phylactery in Hebrew written at the request of the Yorkshire antiquary Ralph Thoresby for his Musaeum Thoresbianum, to which she also presented a ‘Turkish commission’. ... She taught Hebrew to her son and daughter. It appears from Thoresby's Ducatus Leodiensis that Bland was alive in 1712, but her precise death date is unknown."

Nehemiah Grew describes a phylactery in the Royal Society's repository as a scroll of parchment ¼ inch broad and 15 inches long, with four sentences of the law (Exodus 8: 7–11, 13–17; Deuteronomy 6: 3–10; and Deuteronomy 11: 13–19) "most curiously written upon it in Hebrew" (Grew, 681).

Dictionary of National Biography entry: http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/2606?docPos=2 Artisan or Craftsman - creator
Authority - early modern
Correspondent
Relevant locations: Residence at Beeston, Leeds
Relationships: Elizabeth Bland was a correspondent of Ralph Thoresby (1658-1725)
Elizabeth Bland was a source of object(s) for Ralph Thoresby (1658-1725)

Nathaniel Bland (-fl. 1716) was a husband of Elizabeth Bland
Franciscus Mercurius Van Helmont (20 Oct 1614-30 Nov 1698) was a source of information for Elizabeth Bland
Linked print sources: as Donator of object(s) - Ducatus Leodiensis; or the topography of the town and parish of Leedes and parts adjacent ...
References in Documents:
Thoresby, Musaeum Thoresbyanum (1713)

A Plate of the Palmetto-Leaf writ upon, or more properly engraved or impress'd with a Stile; it is above half a Yard long, and but an Inch broad: Others, not writ upon, are an Inch and half deep, and near 12 in Length; these by a Hole punched at both Ends appear to have been designed for a Book, and to be filed upon Strings. A small Writing or Ticket upon a darker coloured Paper-Reed from the Bay of Bengall Of a different one from Malabar, see the various Editions of the Bible. The Chinese Characters and Language upon transparent Paper, with two Pictures. Indian Writing upon different Sorts of Paper with Red Ink and Black, one in Gold upon blew made up into a Fan, of which and others upon a Cane, see before. A different Character upon white Paper. An Example of the Sclavonian Character in a Roll of Paper about 14 Foot long. Don. D. Sam. Ibbetson Merc. A Book or Scroll of 17 Yards two Foot long, wrap'd up in Quarto eight Inches broad, from Onar in the Kingdom of Canara in the East-Indies; it is to be writ upon with a Slate Pen. Don. D. Tho. Wilson Merc. Part of a Letter writ by the King of Bantam upon a reddish Paper. Don. D. Sa. Speering. Several Lines in Arabick writ in the Lord H.'s Lodgings in Cambridgeshire, An. 1700, by Hamet Cardanash, Ambassador from the Emperor of Moroco. Don. D. Jac. Talbot D. D. An Autograph of Seraphim's, a Native Græcian, whose Translation of the New Testament into modern Greek, was printed Anno 1693. Don. Rev. Jo. Hardy. A Jewish Philactery in Hebrew, in a single Scroll of Parchment, with the four Sentences of the Law mentioned by Dr. Grew, amongst the Curiosities of the Royal Society, writ at my Request, and given by that learned Gentlewoman, Mrs. Eliz. Bland of Beeston in this Parish, who hath taught that Primitive Language (wherein she was instructed by the Lord Van Helmont) to her Son and Daughter. A Turkish Commission, given me by the said Mrs. Bland, the Paper is thick and smooth, and the Seal very large, viz. three Inches broad, and above half a Foot in Length. The Divan of Algiers's Pass to Sir John Lawson the Admiral 1663, in Arabick gilded. Don. D. Rob. Stephens Arm. This has a small Seal, but note, the Turks seal not with Wax, but Ink; the Emperor's Name being usually written with Flourishes, and in perplexed Characters; nor have they any Coat of Arms upon their Seals, there being no such Thing as Gentility among them. (Dr. Smith's Observa. of Contantinople, Phil. Trans. N° 155.) So the Manx Warrant or Token is not to be understood of one under Hand and Seal upon Paper, but of a blew Slate, about the Bigness of a Crown-Piece,with the Deemsters Mark upon it, which being delivered to the Defendant, he is obliged to appear. (Vide Cambd. Brit. N. E. p. 1066.) This hath upon one Side T S M (Tho. Sodor & Man), and upon the other the Governor's Mark, for the Person charged thereby, being a Soldier, was not to be forced from his Post by any Power but the Governor's. The Right Reverend Bishop of Man, from whom I received this Curiosity, writes they are now as much in Use as ever, and the People pay a readier Obedience to them, than to an Order under Hand and Seal.

Thoresby, Musaeum Thoresbyanum (1713) The Epistle of Paul to the Laodiceans. A Catalogue of those Scriptures that are mentioned, but not inserted in the Bible, &c. with some Scriptures (said to be) corrupted by the Translators. Lond. 1680, in 8°. Don. D. Eliz. Bland.