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Basevi, (Elias) George
(b London, 1 April 1794; d Ely, 16 Oct 1845). English architect. He was born into a wealthy and cultured family related to the Disraelis and the Ricardos, and he trained in John Soanes office (181016), receiving what was then probably the best architectural education available in England, as in his watercolour of the staircase of Gower House, London (1813; London, Soane Mus.; see CHAMBERS, WILLIAM, fig. 2). In 1816 he began a tour of Italy and Greece, which was recorded in letters to his family (untraced; typescript London, Soane Mus.) and in drawings and sketches (London, Soane Mus.; see Jordan). After travelling via Paris to Turin, Florence, Rome, Venice and Vicenza, a meeting with C. R. Cockerell in Rome (1817) persuaded him to visit Greece; during 1818 he went via Naples to Thessaly, Constantinople and Athens, returning to Rome via Sicily.
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