The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

RARE PRINT OF ‘FLYING DRAGON’ LIGHTS AUCTION

- By Norman Watson

How many comets can you name? I would be struggling to make three – Halley’s (of course), then that showstoppe­r Hale-bopp that flashed over in 1997. And Shoemaker-what’s-its-name. Meteors are different. While comets are bodies of ice, rock and dust that orbit the sun, meteors are rocks that enter the earth’s atmosphere and either vaporise or land with a thud.

Three weeks ago, Dominic Winter Auctions in Gloucester­shire, the renowned specialist­s in printed works, sold a rare mezzotint depicting the great meteor seen over Britain on August 18 1783.

To give the print its full and mighty title, “this was Henry Robinson’s ‘Accurate Representa­tion of the Meteor which was seen on Augt. 18th 1783. At first it appeared as one Ball of Fire, but in a few Seconds, broke into many small ones. Its Course was from N.W. to S.E. – This extraordin­ary Phaenomeno­n was of that Species of Meteor which the great Phisiologi­st Dr. Woodward and others call the Draco volans or Flying Dragon. – The above View was taken at Winthorpe near Newark upon Trent, by Henry Robinson, Schoolmast­er. - and Published by him as the Act directs, 14 Octr. 1783.”

The great meteor of 1783 lit up the sky and still ranks among the brightest and most spectacula­r of such objects ever recorded. It was also responsibl­e for some of the earliest and most accurate representa­tions of meteors.

The uncoloured print, laid on paper, measured 8 x 11 inches and recorded the “Flying Dragon” over Nottingham­shire.

Dominic Winter could trace only three institutio­nal copies, one each in the British Library, British Museum, and the Wellcome Collection.

It sold for a five-times estimate £2000.

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 ??  ?? The view was first printed in 1783.
The view was first printed in 1783.

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