
Timeline 1788
Timeline
1824
Newstead
Abbey
The poet Byron
was born in London in 1788. He was lame,
born with a
club foot. Much of his early childhood was spent in Scotland
where he was tended by a nurse whose encouragement of physical
affection was reputedly one of the factors in his later attitude to
women.
He
moved to
Nottinghamshire at the age of 10 when he inherited the family
home, Newstead Abbey, on the death of
his great
uncle. He was privately educated in Nottingham and later sent to
Harrow before gaining a place at Trinity College, Cambridge. He spent
just a term there (although he returned to complete his studies later)
before moving to London and spending much of the family money on
entertainment, leaving him in serious debt. That was one of the driving
forces behind his decision to publish his writings.
Newstead was unfit for living at the time Byron inherited and it was
not until 1809 that he was finally able to move in. It soon
became the base for many of Byron's notorious wild exploits. In
the Great Hall, for example, all the fittings had been stripped
(including the fireplace) by the previous Lord Byron in a bid to pay
off his debts. George (the poet) Byron could not afford to restore them
so he used the room for pistol practice.
Byron was a notrious womaniser, surrounded by scandal for much of his
early life. His affairs were widely known, one of the most public being
that with Lady Caroline Lamb. Her intense fixation with him, even after
he had tired of her, was such an embarrassment that her family had her
shipped off to Ireland to get her away from him. Among the tricks she
tried to entice him back to her bed was to send him her pubic
hair! It was she who dubbed the poet "mad, bad and dangerous to
know" in one of her diaries.

In a bid to
overcome the
notoriety of his many affairs Byron married in
1815 and within a
year the association had
produced a daughter, Augusta
Ada. But the marriage was doomed and in 1816 Byron moved permanently
abroad. His womanising continued in Europe. In Italy he had
a love affair with a married woman, the Countess Teresa Guicciolo. Her
husband summoned her home and Byron followed, eventually becoming a
friend of her family.
Later he developed an
interest in the Greek war of independence
against
the Turks and raised a private army with a donation of £4,000 aid
the fight. While in Messolonghi, Greece in 1824 he caught a fever,
which killed him. His body was returned to England and he is buried
next to his daughter in St Mary Magdalene Church, Hucknall,
Nottinghamshire.
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