拍品專文
Frederick, Count Von Schaumburg-Lippe (1724-77) was closely related to the House of Hanover through his mother, the daughter of King George I and the Duchess of Kendal. He served as Commander of the Artillery under Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick in the Seven Years War and in 1761 he commanded the English troops sent to the defence of Portugal. Reynolds' sitters books reveal that he sat to the artist on 23rd of October 1764 and on 3rd and 5th of August 1767. This portrait is a three-quarter-length version of the full-length portrait, which may have been executed for George, 1st Marquess of Townshend (d.1807), now in the Royal collection at St. James's Palace. The latter picture is first recorded in the Royal Collection in 1816 when it was in the Crimson Drawing-Room at Carlton House: It was sent to St. James's on November 1830. The Cowdray version differs from the Royal collection portrait in that the flag is decorated with the French Fleur-de-Lis, and the cannon that appears in the Royal Collection picture is omitted, although one can be seen firing in the distance of the present composition.