Daniel Webb (writer)
Daniel Webb was an Irish writer on aesthetics whose works enjoyed a considerable vogue for a time.
Life
Webb was born at Maidstown, County Limerick, in 1718 or 1719, the eldest son of Daniel Webb of Maidstown Castle, and his wife Dorothea, daughter and heiress of M. Leake of Castle Leake, County Tipperary. He matriculated from New College, Oxford, on 13 June 1735.Following his studies he went to Rome, where he became friendly with the Neoclassical painter Anton Raphael Mengs who painted his portrait. On his return to Britain he published his Inquiry into the Beauties of Painting. Winkelmann later accused him of having plagiarised the work from the unpublished manuscript of Mengs' treatise Gedanken über die Schönheit.
In later life he lived mainly at Bath. He was married twice, first, to Jane Lloyd and, later to Elizabeth Creed. He died, leaving no children, on 2 August 1798.
Works
- An Inquiry into the Beauties of Painting.
- Remarks on the Beauties of Poetry,.
- Observations on the Correspondence between Poetry and Music.
- Literary Amusements in Verse and Prose.Some Reasons for thinking the Greek Language was borrowed from the Chinese: In Notes on the "Grammatica Sinica" of Mons. Fourmont. Webb's theory of the derivation of the Greek language was not one that Fourmont, a French scholar who died in 1745, had considered.