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  2. Professor William Vaughan is one of the most respected historians and critics of Romantic art in the world. He was almost single-handedly responsible for the introduction of German Romantic art to a British public, doing more to foster this area of study than any other writer.

  3. Sir William Vaughan (c. 1575 – August 1641) was a Welsh writer in English and Latin. He promoted colonization in Newfoundland, but with mixed success. [1]

  4. Sir William Vaughan was a Welsh author and scholar who promoted and unsuccessfully attempted the colonisation of Newfoundland, Canada, in the 1600s. He was born in 1575, the son of Walter Vaughan who owned the estate of Golden Grove (Gelli Aur) in Carmarthenshire.

  5. Aug 1, 2016 · As a writer he was prolific and influential, his books being well received by the legal fraternity, the Royal Court and intellectual society. By modern standards they are tedious and certainly not ‘page-turners’. He addressed philosophical, moral, economic, political, religious and medical matters, with some content written in verse.

  6. William Vaughan may refer to: William Vaughan (philanthropist) (died 1580), English landowner, farmer and philanthropist; Sir William Vaughan (writer) (1575–1641), Welsh writer and colonial investor; Sir William Vaughan (Royalist) (died 1649), English royalist commander in the First English Civil War; William Gwyn Vaughan (1680s–1753 ...

  7. William Vaughan is Professor of the History of Art at Birkbeck College, London. After studying at the Ruskin School of Art in Oxford and the Courtauld Institute, London, he became an Assistant Keeper at the Tate Gallery, London.

  8. Sir William Vaughan (c. 1575 – August 1641) was a Welsh writer in English and Latin. He promoted colonization in Newfoundland, but with mixed success. Early life.