Christopher Wren (1632-1723) was the greatest architect Britain has ever known. But he was more than that. A founder of the Royal Society, he mapped the moon & the stars, investigated the problem of longitude & the rings of Saturn, & carried out groundbreaking experiments into the circulation of the blood. His observations on comets, meteorology & muscular action made vital contributions to the developing ideas of Newton, Halley & Boyle. His Invention So Fertile presents the first complete picture of this towering genius: the Surveyor-General of the King's Works, running the nation's biggest architectural office & wrestling with corruption & interference; the pioneering anatomist; the mathematician, devising new navigational instruments & lecturing on planetary motion. It also shows us the man behind the legend. Wren was married & widowed twice, he fathered a mentally handicapped child, quarrelled with his colleagues & fell foul of his employers. He scrambled over building sites & went to the theatre & drank in coffee-houses. The book explores what it was like to be at Oxford during the Commonwealth, as a generation struggled to make sense of a society in chaos; it recreates the tensions which tore apart the court of James II; it brings to life the petty jealousies that formed an integral part of both the building world & scientific milieu of the Royal Society. Above all, His Invention So Fertile makes clear to the general reader & the art historian just why Wren remains a cultural icon
- both a creation & a creator of the world he lived in.