Philip Luckombe (baptised 1730 – died 1803) was an English printer and author.
Life
He was born at Exeter, the son of John Luckombe, a tailor. He worked as a printer there, and then moved to London, where he was employed as a writer.[1][2]
The editor of dictionaries and encyclopædias, Luckombe also wrote books on printing, and made a study of conchology. His collection of shells was considerable, and his learning brought him the acquaintance of Thomas Percy.[1]
A Concise History of the Origin and Progress of Printing, 1770.
The History and Art of Printing, 2 parts, 1771.
A Tour through Ireland, 1780. This work depended on plagiarism, for instance from Richard Twiss.[2] Other works it draws on were the early Tour with Chetwood, the Hibernia Curiosa (1769) of John Bush of Tunbridge Wells, and Thomas Campbell's Philosophical Survey (1777).[3]
The Traveller's Companion, or a New Itinerary of England and Wales, 1789.
^Susan M. Kroeg, Philip Luckombe's "A Tour through Ireland" (1780) and the Problem of Plagiarism, Eighteenth-Century Ireland / Iris an dá chultúr Vol. 19 (2004), pp. 126–137, at p. 126. Published by: Eighteenth-Century Ireland Society. Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/30071022