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Mary Cozens/Czar Peter the great

Re: Mary Cozens/Czar Peter the great

Posted: 22 Jul 2012 12:00AM GMT
Classification: Biography
Surnames: Cozens
I have no doubt it is true.

Re: Mary Cozens/Czar Peter the great

Posted: 22 Jul 2012 12:27AM GMT
Classification: Biography
Surnames: Cozens
Hello William, I do have some information regarding Sarah Cozens (b.1732 d. 1810, who married John Cayley on Dec. 19, 1756. They had eight children, two daughters died young. Their children were Henry (1768-1850) married Mary Doughty in 1814; William (1766-1803) married Elizabeth Cavanaugh in 1792; George (b.1763-?); Cornelius (b. 1762-?); Sally (b.1764-1837) married George Moberly (b. 1803-1885); John (b. 1761-?); Ann (b. 1765-?) married Poggenphol in 1792 (as recorded in the English Church in St. Petersburg, Russia, and a second time in 1799 Edward Moberly; Elizabeth (b. 1757-?). I have not read anything about Annie Moberly, but it could be related either to Sally or to Ann! A very prominent family I must say. Although there are stories that link Sarah to Alexander Cozens as his sister, my research proves otherwise. The Cozens that have been linked to Alexander Cozens as siblings, that is Mary, Margaretta Maria, Richard and Sarah all remained in Russia for several generations, and their last will and testaments exclude mentioning Alexander Cozens as a brother, or child of their father Richard Cozens. If you find otherwise, please let me know! Hope you find the info useful in your research. Best Wishes.

Re: Mary Cozens/Czar Peter the great

Posted: 22 Jul 2012 1:09AM GMT
Classification: Query
Thanks.
A theory is that when Peter the Great visited England in the late seventeenth century he took a mistress... perhaps Mary Davenport. He took Mary back to Russia. Mary was married to Richard Cozens. Peter the Great sired 3 children with Mary. Al painter, a future Russian general and Richard Cozens who had a daughter named Sarah who as you say married John Caley.

Any truth to this chain of events?
You can email me at williamtyrer@gmail.com

Regards

Re: Mary Cozens/Czar Peter the great

Posted: 22 Jul 2012 1:48AM GMT
Classification: Query
Surnames: Cozens



Richard Cozens, Shipbuilder to Peter the Great.

Peter I was in England for four months in 1697-1698. He hired several ship builders, one of them Richard Cozens, who arrived in Russia in 1700.

Alexander Cozens and Peter Cozens were sired by Peter I, sailed to England in 1727 (Alexander was 10 years old, Peter was only 8). Peter died soon after. Alexander lived his life in comfort under the protection of the Hamilton Family. His mother was Mary Hamilton, decapitated (March 1719) by the Tsar himself for "infanticide". After the decapitation, the Tsar gave a lecture of anatomy holding the dead head high, then kissed it and threw it on the mud. Alexander lived a lovely professional and family life in England. Most of Alexander Cozens paintings were recently sold by the Duke of Hamilton to the Tate Gallery. The rest are in the Victoria & Albert Museum, and other important museums. The Orlov Family also followed Alexander Cozens steps by means of subscriptions to Alexander's books.

A lovely professional and large family life was also lived by Richard Cozens in Russia:

Kozens [Cozens], Richard, master shipbuilder, died in December 1735 in Archangel. Received into Russian service in 1700. From 1701 to 1709 in Voronezh built the 70-gun ships Staryi Dub [Old Oak] and Spyashchii Lev [Sleeping Lion]. From 1707 to 1710 in Tavrov he built six ships of 24, 48, and 80 guns. From 1712 to 1732 in St. Petersburg he built nine ships, and on 10 July 1723 he was awarded the rank of captain-commodore. In January 1733 he was sent to Archangel where he worked up to the day he died, managing to build three ships and begin a fourth.
 
Obshchii Morskoi spisok, Vol. I, page 179.
 
Translated by Mark Conrad, 2001.

Re: Mary Cozens/Czar Peter the great

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 5:35AM GMT
Classification: Query
Dear Sarah, Greetings from Cancun, Mexico! The ring with the initials P.I. has been mentioned again, and the document that contains such information can be found at the Victoria & Albert Museum. My son Rick Rivas had a private viewing of the miniature painting of Alexander Cozens' daughter, Juliet Ann Cozens, which was donated to the museum in 2003 by Juliet Warwick, also a Cozens descendant. "1. The story of Peter the Great’s paternity of Alexander Cozens has now been discounted but it may be of interest that there is a gold ring,
now in my cousin’s possession, engraved inside “P.I.” and a date towards the end of the 17th century, which family tradition says was given
by Peter to Alexander’s mother. Those initials cannot be accounted for otherwise." You can read the .pdf document dound at:http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O119398/portrait-miniature...

Re: Mary Cozens/Czar Peter the great

Posted: 30 Aug 2013 5:47AM GMT
Classification: Query
Surnames: COZENS-SMITH

For your information:
In the following text you can read the Cozens-Smith marriage fact: ...Maria Louisa, a musical genius, and my mother [b.c.1800. JW Note 2]. She married my father, Thomas Smith, on September 30th 1826 at Salisbury.

Victoria and Albert Museum Public access description
Juliet Ann(e) Cozens was the younger of two children of Alexander Cozens (1717-1786). Cozens' wife was the daughter of the engraver John
Pine, but her first name is not known, and his eldest child was the landscape watercolour painter, John Robert Cozens (1752-1797). There is
no known record for the marriage of Alexander Cozens, nor of the date of birth of his two children. But this miniature descended within the
family and the date of birth of the sitter has been assumed to be about 1755 and her death to be about 1837.
This miniature has a been attributed to George Place, and so, should date from between 1791 and 1797 if it was painted in London. In 1791
Place travelled from his birthplace, Dublin, to London, where he established himself as a miniature painter. In 1797 he left England for
Lucknow in India, where he died in 1805. Juliet Ann Cozens appears to be around 40 in this portrait, and so it was plausibly painted about
1795. The donor, who was a descendant of the sitter and had made a study of family history, noted that she had "an over-economical
disposition" and that she was "very probably dowdy rather than fashionable".
Descriptive line
Portrait miniature of Juliet Wackrill, possibly George Place, ca.1797
Physical description
Painted in watercolour on an oval piece of ivory (the ivory has now been detached from a piece of warped card and has been flattened). It
shows a bust length portrait of a middle-aged woman, facing slightly to the viewer's right, with brown hair peeping from underneath a lace
edged white mob cap, tied under her chin, trimmed with a blue silk ribbon. The sitter is wearing a white dress with a blue ribbon at the waist,
and a black lace shawl, and has a single eye glass suspended from a black ribbon around her neck. Blue/mauve background.
Museum number
E.722-2005
Historical context note
This miniature was a gift from Mrs Juliet Wackrill, who is a descendent of the sitter, Juliet Anne Roberts, born Cozens.
Below is a transcript of typed notes provided by Juliet Wackrill, born Young, which she in turn transcribed as excerpts from notes written by the
sitter's grand-daughter, Mrs Juliet Young (the original typescript of these excerpts is in the Departmental File for E.722-2005]:
Quote:
Biographical notes on Mrs Juliet Robets (nee Cozens)
The following excerpt is from notes written by the sitter's grand-daughter, Mrs Juliet Young (b.1831) sometime between 1886 and 1897.
“My grandmother, Juliet Anne or Anne Juliet Cozens [Note 1]…. My grandfather, Charles Roberts (whom she married without much affection)
was a Welshman and according to some papers I have seen he was one of a high family…At the time of his marriage he had an appointment
with the Exchequer Office, which office being abolished during his life he received a pension of £900 a year, a good income in those days,
which, added to my grandmother’s money, some thousands, was sufficient to provide a comfortable home, but they were both eccentric and
preferred to live much below their income; and besides that they gave large sums to their eldest son, and to their eldest daughter's husband,
which left but little for their [other?] children, who were :
Juliet, married John Rowlatt, a Russia merchant
Alexander, unmarried, was in the Commissariat, and at the Battle of Waterloo [Note 2]
Lydia, married when about 50 Richard Harvey, an Irish farmer to whom as her sister’s brother-in-law she had lend money and who married
her instead of paying it
Jessie, who married William Harvey, also an Irish farmer; both men were weak and ignorant and ill-educated
Edward, of feeble intellect and eccentric habits.
Charles, very musical, for a time in the Exchequer Office, eccentric, died comparatively young
Maria Louisa, a musical genius, and my mother [b.c.1800. JW Note 2]. She married my father, Thomas Smith, on September 30th 1826 at
Salisbury.
-------------
I saw my grandmother once when I was five or six years old (1836 or 7) soon after which time she died [Note 2] … My uncle Edward… had the
queer fancy my Grandfather Roberts had that to look like a gentleman was not desirable, he therefore dressed like a very poor man in his
Sunday clothes, and if better clothes were given to him he would not wear them… Another odd visitor we saw occasionally was Sophy Cozens…
who kept a small school in Norton Street, she was fond of my mother and grateful to her for the effort she made to secure a pension given to
her by the Royal Academy of Painters, in honour, I suppose, of the artist Cozens, who must have been her father or brother”. [manuscript note
: "Sophy was illegitimate daughter of John Robert Cozens. See Oppe. JW"].
In connection with the parsimony and eccentricity mentioned above there is a story in the family of how they would all set out to walk as far
towards Brighton as they could so as to save the coach fare. Naturally they did not get very far (especially when some of the children were
still fairly young) so they had to hire a coach for the rest of the journey, which cost as much, if not more, than the public coach would have
done.
[J Wackrill]
Footnotes
1. The story of Peter the Great’s paternity of Alexander Cozens has now been discounted but it may be of interest that there is a gold ring,
now in my cousin’s possession, engraved inside “P.I.” and a date towards the end of the 17th century, which family tradition says was given
by Peter to Alexander’s mother. Those initials cannot be accounted for otherwise.
2. These dates are offered just in case they help in dating the miniature accurately. The sitter appears to me to be not less than 40. I suppose
we can assume that she was born within a few years of her brother, J. R. Cozens.
Juliet Wackrill (nee Young).
[Further hand-written note by Juliet Wackrill, “Juliet Anne Cozens was my great-great-grandmother. As Juliet Young I was a cataloguer in the
V&A Library from 1934-39 (During my last two and a half years there the Director, Sir Eric Maclagan took me for his secretary). I showed the
miniature to Graham Reynolds who was enthusiastic and thought the Museum would certainly want it. It was later on, after the war, that I
showed it to Mr Mayne, who was equally enthusiastic. Juliet Wackrill.]
[A further hand-written note by Juliet Wackrill “Mayne was partly influenced in this dating [painted c.1780-90, perhaps by G Place (worked
1775-1809)] by the period when Place is known to have worked in London. He asked me if the sitter had ever been to Dublin. I did not know,
but have since learnt that she had two Irish sons-in-law ... and it is therefore possible that she visited Ireland later. It should also be borne in
mind that she was very probably dowdy rather than fashionable, being of an over-economical disposition. JW.]
NB. At the time that the V&A received this from Mrs Juliet Wackrill, born Young, (May 2003) Mrs Wackrill had just celebrated her 100th
birthday.
URL
http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O119398/portrait-miniature...
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