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  1. Richard Doyle (10 January 1948 – 22 June 2017) was a British author of thriller novels. Biography [ edit ] Doyle was born in Saint Saviour, Guernsey , and on his third birthday was presented at the court of Emperor Haile Selassie .

  2. Pictured above, left to right. Richard Pooley (Step Great Grandson), Richard Doyle (Great-Nephew) and Catherine Beggs (Great-Niece). Photography by India Hobson. Location is Landing 42, The Leadenhall Building, London. Friends of The Estate.

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  4. Dicky Doyle’s post- Punch career was primarily focused on book illustration. In 1850, he illustrated John Ruskin ’s The King of the Golden River, and his good friend W.M. Thackeray frequently commissioned him to illustrate his work. At this point in his life, in his mid-twenties, Dicky’s tendency to procrastinate and waver in his ...

  5. Title: In Fairyland: A Series of Pictures from the Elf-World. Artist: After Richard Doyle (British, London 1824–1883 London) Author: Related author William Allingham (Irish, Ballyshannon, Donegal 1824–1889 Hampstead, London) Engraver: Engraved and printed in color by Edmund Evans (British, Southwark, London 1826–1905 Ventnor, Isle of Wight)

  6. Nov 5, 2009 · Richard Doyle was born at 17 Cambridge Terrace, London, in September 1824. His father was the Irish cartoonist John Doyle (1783-1851), whose satirical prints were a scourge of the 1820s and thirties. Doyle was one of seven children, and all three of his (surviving) brothers were gifted artists. James (born 1822) was the author and illustrator ...

  7. Doyle was fascinated with elves and fairies and illustrated a number of books of fairy tales. His work, In Fairyland: A series of Pictures from the Elf-World, is considered one of the finest examples of Victorian book production. Doyle was the uncle of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, author of the Sherlock Holmes stories.

  8. Henry Doyle was Richard's younger brother by thirteen years and specialized in portraitism and cartoons like John. He initially illustrated for Punch, where Richard was making his name, but Henry Doyle considered Punch beneath his abilities and went on to become a cartoonist for Fun magazine. Regardless of their differing professional goals ...

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