Background
Born just outside Charleston, South Carolina, he was the son of Mary Izard and Arthur Middleton (a signer of the Declaration of Independence). In 1810 he married Eliza Augusta Falconet, the daughter of a banker in Naples.
Born just outside Charleston, South Carolina, he was the son of Mary Izard and Arthur Middleton (a signer of the Declaration of Independence). In 1810 he married Eliza Augusta Falconet, the daughter of a banker in Naples.
He was dubbed "the first American Classical Archaeologist" by Charles Eliot Norton. Three children were born to the Middletons, but all died young. Middleton died in Paris in 1849.
His remains were returned to the United States for burial at Middleton Place, South Carolina.
Admitted to Cambridge University in 1803, though it is doubtful if he resided, John Middleton spent a good part of his adult life traveling in France and in Italy. While in Italy he was attracted to the remains of ancient sites, particularly those in Latium (modern Lazio).
Inspired perhaps by the work of the Frenchman Louis-Charles-Francois Petit-Radel (author of Voyage historique cronographique et philosophique dans le principales villes des l’Italie (Paris, 1815). Recherches sur le Monuments Cyclopéens (Paris, 1841)), Middleton made observations and sketches of the sites he visited.
He attributed more importance to the drawings than the text, but because it appeared during a time of turmoil in Europe, his work received slight attention from contemporaries.
Some of the drawings appeared in later works on archaeology without cr to Middleton, notably those of Edward Dodwell with whom Middleton travelled. He compiled the sketches from his travels in 1808 and 1809 in order to publish as a folio-sized book