(
c. 1603–1685), an English politician The Hardings published many prints of subjects designed by Silvester and engraved by
Francesco Bartolozzi,
Jean Marie Delattre,
William Nelson Gardiner and others. Silvester Harding concentrated on drawing portraits of theatrical celebrities, and copying historical portraits in
watercolours which were used to illustrate other works. Their first publication of this kind was ''Shakespeare illustrated by an Assemblage of Portraits and Views appropriated to the whole suite of our Author's Historical Dramas'', consisting of 150 plates, issued in thirty numbers 1789–1793. They produced also the
Memoirs of Count Grammont (1793);
The Economy of Human Life (1795) with plates by Gardiner from designs by Harding;
Gottfried August Bürger's
Leonora (1796) translated by
William Robert Spencer; and
John Dryden's
Fables (1797), both illustrated with plates from drawings by
Lady Diana Beauclerk. The first volume of their extensive series of historical portraits,
The Biographical Mirrour, with text by
Francis Godolphin Waldron, appeared in 1795. Silvester alone continued the
Biographical Mirrour, of which he issued the second volume in 1798; the third was ready for publication at the time of his death. Among other original works by Harding were a portrait of Sir
Busick Harwood, M.D., engraved on a large scale in
mezzotint by John Jones, and a set of six illustrations to
Rosalynde, Euphues Golden Legacie (the original of
Shakespeare's
As You Like It), with notes by F. G. Waldron, which were engraved and published by his brother Edward in 1802. The largest of his watercolour copies,
Charles II receiving the first pine-apple cultivated in England from Rose, the gardener at Dawney Court, Bucks, the seat of the Duchess of Cleveland, from a picture at Strawberry Hill, was engraved by R. Grave in 1823. Busick Harwood also commissioned Harding to paint miniature watercolours of over 130 members of the University of Cambridge in the 1790s. ==Family==