Keppel Craven

The Honourable Richard Keppel Craven (14 April 1779 – 24 June 1851) was a British nobleman, traveller and author.

They returned to England in 1791 to send Keppel to school at Harrow under an assumed name, where, however, he was soon recognised by his likeness to her, and henceforth was called by his family name.

[2] His father died on 27 September 1791 and his mother in the following month married Christian Frederick Charles Alexander, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach.

Six years afterwards he was called on to give evidence at the trial of the unfortunate princess, when he stated that he was in her service for six months, during which time he never saw any impropriety in her conduct either at Milan or Naples, or improper familiarity on the part of her Italian servant Bergami.

Another work, published in London in 1825, was Italian Scenes: a Series of interesting Delineations of Remarkable Views and of Celebrated Remains of Antiquity.