Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 60.djvu/363

 1841; ‘The Soul enslaved by Sin,’ a relief, 1847; ‘Go and sin no more,’ 1850; ‘David,’ 1852. Westmacott exhibited in all eighty-two works at the Royal Academy, in addition to four at the British Institution.

Westmacott's only important public work in London was the sculpture in the pediment of the west front of the Royal Exchange, erected 1842–4. The recumbent statue of Archbishop Howley in the choir of Canterbury Cathedral, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1850, is the most important of his monuments.

In 1857 he succeeded his father as professor of sculpture at the Royal Academy, and held that office till 1867. He was a fellow of the Royal Society, to which he was elected on 25 May 1837, and was well known as a writer and lecturer on art, contributing articles on sculpture to the ‘Encyclopædia Metropolitana,’ the ‘English Encyclopædia,’ and the ‘Penny Cyclopædia.’ He published ‘The Handbook of Ancient and Modern Sculpture’ in 1864, and several pamphlets. ‘Outlines to Illustrate a Moral Allegory, entitled “The Fighte of Freewille,”’ eight plates, engraved from Westmacott's designs, with descriptive text, appeared in 1839.

Westmacott retired from the Royal Academy about a year before his death, which took place at 1 Kensington Gate, Hyde Park, on 19 April 1872.

[Redgrave's Dict. of Artists; Sandby's Hist. of Royal Academy, ii. 197; Royal Academy Catalogues.]  WESTMEATH,. [See, first earl, 1583-1642; , second earl, d. 1684;, fourth earl, 1650-1752; , fifth earl, 1672-1754.]

WESTMINSTER, Marquises of. [See, first marquis, 1767-1845; , second marquis, 1795-1869.]

WESTMINSTER, MATTHEW, is an imaginary name given to a supposed author of a chronicle called ‘Flores Historiarum;’ it is affixed to a manuscript of the ‘Flores,’ probably written early in the fifteenth century for Henry le Despenser [q. v.], bishop of Norwich, and now in the British Museum, Cottonian MS. Claud. E. 8 ff. 14–236, which begins ‘Incipit prologus in librum qui Flores Historiarum intitulatur, secundum Mathæum Monachum Westmonasteriensem.’ As early as 1826 Sir Francis Palgrave described Westminster as ‘a phantom who never existed’ (Quarterly Review, 1826, . i. 250). Sir T. D. Hardy, in the introduction to ‘Monumenta Historica Britannica,’ 1848, p. 7, spoke of him as ‘a supposed person,’ but wrote somewhat uncertainly. Sir F. Madden in the preface to his edition of Matthew Paris's ‘Historia Anglorum’ (1866, vol. i. pp. xxi sq.) pointed out that the name Matthew Westminster was fictitious, Westminster being taken from the abbey to which the ‘Flores’ belonged, and Matthew being borrowed from Matthew Paris, whom he erroneously believed to have been the author of the earlier part of the chronicle, and the actual transcriber of the earliest manuscript of it. Nevertheless, Hardy in his ‘Descriptive Catalogue of Manuscripts’ (1871, iii. 313 sq.) was unwilling to allow that there was no such person as Westminster; and Luard in his edition of the ‘Chronica Majora’ (1872, i. pref. xxi n.) was unable to reject the claim made for ‘Matthew, a monk of Westminster,’ to the authorship of the ‘Flores.’ Luard, however, in his edition of the ‘Flores,’ prefaces to vols. i. and iii. 1890, finally settled the question, proving by a masterly exposition of the history of the book and the character and composition of each portion of it, that Matthew Westminster was an imaginary name given to a person that never existed, and that the ‘Flores’ was partly compiled and partly composed by various writers at St. Albans and Westminster.

The ‘Flores’ was first printed by Archbishop Parker, as the work of Matthew Westminster, in 1567, from a manuscript written at Merton early in the fourteenth century, and now belonging to Eton College, except an addition for 1307, which is taken from Trivet's ‘Annales;’ this edition is fairly faithful. Parker, having meanwhile become acquainted with some other manuscripts of the ‘Flores’ and with Matthew Paris's ‘Chronica Majora,’ put out a second edition in 1570, in which he made insertions from other books, and specially from the work of Paris. The edition published at Frankfort in 1601 is a reprint of that of 1570. Luard's edition of the ‘Flores’ in ‘Chronicles and Memorials of Great Britain,’ 1890, 3 vols., is founded chiefly on the earliest manuscript of the work, the Chetham MS. (Manchester) 6712, collated with that belonging to Eton, and gives the whole work, which ends at 1325, the earlier editions ending with 1307. He accordingly printed for the first time the part from 1307 to 1325, written by Robert of Reading, a monk of Westminster, who died in 1325, an original and contemporary authority for the reign of Edward II. 