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  1. Dr Anthony Addington by Thomas Banks, 1790, Victoria and Albert Museum. Anthony Addington (1713 – 22 March 1790) was an English physician.

  2. 12 de mai. de 2009 · Anthony Addington, the doctor who had treated Francis Blandy, suspected arsenic was the substance that had felled him and conducted a series of physical tests to prove his point.

  3. Antony Addington, M.D., was the youngest son of Henry Addington, gent., of Fringford, in Oxfordshire, and received his preliminary education at Winchester, whence he was elected to Trinity college, Oxford, as a member of which he proceeded A.B. 14th July, 1739; A.M. 13th May, 1740; M.B. 6th February, 1741; M.D. 24th January, 1744.

  4. 1904 Errata appended. ADDINGTON, ANTHONY, M.D., (1713–1790), physician, father of the first Viscount Sidmouth, was born on 13 Dec. 1713. He was the youngest son of an Oxfordshire gentleman, the owner and occupier of a moderately sized estate at Twyford in that county, where the family had been settled for generations.

  5. This arresting bust represents Dr. Anthony Addington, a physician who specialized in psychiatric disorders and who numbered King George III among his patients. It was commissioned posthumously by Addington’s son, Henry, and was made from a death mask taken shortly after Addington died.

  6. 13 de jun. de 2009 · In the 1752 English trial of Mary Blandy, who was accused of poisoning her father, medical examiner Anthony Addington tested white powder found at the bottom of a pan that had been used to serve gruel to the victim. Addington heated the powder and noticed the same garlicky smell as that of similarly tested arsenic.

  7. Royal Physician. Died: 1790 at Fringford, Oxfordshire. Anthony Addington, the father of the 1st Viscount Sidmouth , was born on 13th December 1718. He was the youngest son of a Berkshire gentleman, the owner and occupier of a moderately sized estate at Twyford in that county, where the family had been settled for generations.