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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:George_Taylor_(boxer)
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George Taylor (boxer)
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George Taylor (fl. 1734–1750) was an English boxer. His mentor was James Figg, and he took over Figg's "Great Booth" in Tottenham Court Road after Figg's death in 1734. One of the main attractions at Taylor's establishment was Jack Broughton, the leading boxer of the era, but Taylor and Broughton soon fell out and the latter opened his own ring.
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n10:Engraving_of_George_Taylor,_boxer.jpg
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dbc:Bare-knuckle_boxers dbc:English_male_boxers dbc:18th-century_English_people
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71698191
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dbr:Floruit dbr:William_Hogarth dbc:18th-century_English_people dbr:Jack_Broughton dbr:Tate_Britain n14:Engraving_of_George_Taylor,_boxer.jpg dbc:Bare-knuckle_boxers dbc:English_male_boxers dbr:James_Figg
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George Taylor (fl. 1734–1750) was an English boxer. His mentor was James Figg, and he took over Figg's "Great Booth" in Tottenham Court Road after Figg's death in 1734. One of the main attractions at Taylor's establishment was Jack Broughton, the leading boxer of the era, but Taylor and Broughton soon fell out and the latter opened his own ring. Like Figg, Taylor is remembered primarily because of his relationship with the painter William Hogarth, who admired boxers and used them as models. Hogarth created an elaborate design for Taylor's gravestone, featuring the boxer pummeling death himself.
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