Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston
painting by Isaac Whood (1688/1689–1752), Winchester College
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston
Summary
Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston is a painting[1].
Key Facts
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston is the creator of Isaac Whood[2].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's image is recorded as Isaac Whood (1688-1689-1752) - Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston - Ao6 - Winchester College.jpg[3].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's instance of is recorded as painting[4].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's genre is recorded as portrait[5].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's depicts is recorded as Charles Bennet, 3rd Earl of Tankerville[6].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's made from material is recorded as oil paint[7].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's made from material is recorded as canvas[8].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's collection is recorded as Winchester College[9].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's inventory number is recorded as Ao6[10].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's location is recorded as Winchester College[11].
- +1731-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston[12].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's main subject is recorded as Charles Bennet, 3rd Earl of Tankerville[13].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's title is recorded as Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston[14].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's Art UK artwork ID is recorded as charles-bennet-17161767-lord-ossulston-331108[15].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's height is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q174728', 'amount': '+105'}[16].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's width is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q174728', 'amount': '+82.5'}[17].
- Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston's copyright status is recorded as public domain[18].
Body
Works and Contributions
Charles Bennet (1716–1767), Lord Ossulston is the creator of Isaac Whood[2].