Person    | Male  Born 22/1/1788  Died 18/4/1824

Lord Byron

Categories: Poetry, Seriously Famous

Countries: Greece, Scotland

Born Holles Street, baptised at St Marylebone church in the same year. Spent the first 10 years of his life in Aberdeen with his mother. On the death of a great-uncle in 1798 he succeeded to the title Baron Byron of Rochdale. For a poem he wrote to his friend, see Tom Moore. Famously described as "mad, bad and dangerous to know" by Lady Caroline Lamb who did not survive her affair with him well. Died in Missolonghi Greece having gone there to fight but died of illness before seeing any action. A brief marriage to Anne Isabella Milbanke produced Ada Lovelace. Byron also features on BrusselsRemembers.

Another daughter, Allegra, died aged 5 and Byron had her buried at his old school, Harrow. For information about Allegra's mother see the plaque to Mary and Percy Shelley.

Byron was buried in St. Mary Magdalene Hucknall, near Nottingham.

2022: Listening to BBC’s “Mark Steel’s In Town, Nottingham” we were entertained to hear this phallocentric story:  In 1938 the vicar at the church, Canon Houldsworth, wanted to confirm that Byron’s body was indeed in the vault.  Permission to open the vault was granted on condition that a representative of government was present so a local MP, Seymour Cocks, was one of a party of around 40 people who, on 15 June 1938, gathered for the opening. Byron’s body was found as expected. Flashbak has a gruesome description of the state it was in, which was “excellent”, including “His sexual organ shewed quite abnormal development.” The BBC programme reports Houldsworth as describing how the body looked: “he was built like a pony.” The programme gives their source for the story as an article written by the journalist Byron Rogers.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Lord Byron

Commemorated ati

Byron in Bologna

The creators of this plaque have copied the two paragraphs from the original ...

Read More

Byron in Bologna - lost

The photo of the plaque comes from Storia e Memoria di Bologna. The caption t...

Read More

Byron statue

Byron is shown with his beloved Newfoundland dog, Boatswain, who had died of ...

Read More

Lord Byron - first blue plaque, P1

Lord Byron (1788 - 1824), poet, lived here. LCC

Read More

Lord Byron - non standard plaque, P3

Lord Byron was born here 1788.

Read More

Show all 7

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Lord Byron

Creations i

International Brigade

The quote “they went….other way” is a paraphrase of two lines from C. Day Lew...

Read More

Kaled

Sculpted in 1872-3. Stone, painted white. About 1.4m high. This statue repres...

Read More

Other Subjects

Richard Le Gallienne

Richard Le Gallienne

Poet and essayist. Born in Liverpool. A member of The Rhymers' Club.Died in Menton, south of France.

Person, Poetry, France

1 memorial
Anna Laetitia Barbauld

Anna Laetitia Barbauld

Poet and writer. Born Anna Letitia Aikin at Kibworth Harcourt, Leicestershire. She had a successful career at a time when women rarely were professional writers. Her writing includes essays, poems ...

Person, Literature, Poetry

1 memorial
Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou

Author and poet.  Born Marguerite Ann Johnson in St Louis, Missouri, USA. She died, aged 86 years, on 28 May 2014 at her home in Winston-Salem, Forsyth County, North Carolina, USA. Her body was cr...

Person, Gender Issues, Poetry, USA

1 memorial
Michelangelo

Michelangelo

Sculptor, painter, architect and poet.

Person, Architecture, Art, Engineering, Poetry, Sculpture, Seriously Famous, Italy

5 memorials

Previously viewed

Byron John Hancock

Byron John Hancock

Non-British, killed by the Bali bomb.

Person, Tragedy

1 memorial
City of London School 2 - Shakespeare

City of London School 2 - Shakespeare

EC4, Victoria Embankment, 60

We've listed the statues left to right across the front of the building, with More all on his lonesome on the west (left) facade.  The 1...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
A. E. Burgess

A. E. Burgess

R/3831 Rifleman Kings Royal Rifle Corps. Age 37. Gone but not forgotten. Wife Emily and children.

Person

War dead, WW1
1 memorial
St Mary Magdalen, Bermondsey, churchyard garden

St Mary Magdalen, Bermondsey, churchyard garden

Churchyard closed for burials and given to the Vestry of Bermondsey on 17 May 1882, it was opened to the public on 28 February 1883.

Place, Gardens / Agriculture, Religion

1 memorial
Nora Maude

Nora Maude

Central Secretary of the Mothers' Union in 1925.  In 1926 was quoted in newspapers as opposed to divorce, supporting a MU decision to deny membership to a divorced woman.

Person, Gender Issues, Politics & Administration

1 memorial