Online Encyclopedia

RICHARD BROTHERS (1757-1824)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 651 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RICHARD BROTHERS (1757-1824)  ,
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British religious fanatic, was born in
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Newfoundland on Christmas day, 1757, and educated at
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Woolwich . He entered the
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navy and served under Keppel and Rodney . In 1783 he became
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lieutenant, and was discharged on
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half-pay . He travelled on the continent, made an unhappy
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marriage in 1786, and again went to sea . But he felt that the military calling and
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Christianity were incompatible and abandoned the former (1789) . Further scruples as to the oath required on the receipt of his half-pay reduced him to serious pecuniary straits (1791), and he divided his time between the open air and the workhouse, where he
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developed the idea that he had a
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special divine commission, and wrote to the king and the parliament to that effect . In 1793 he declared himself the apostle of a new religion, " the
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nephew of the Almighty, and prince of the Hebrews, appointed to lead them to the
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land of Canaan." At the end of 1794 he began to
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print his interpretations of prophecy, his first
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book being A Revealed Knowledge of the Prophecies and Times . In consequence of prophesying the
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death of the king and the end of the monarchy, he was arrested for treason in 1795, and confined as a criminal lunatic . His case was, however, brought before parliament by his ardent
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disciple, Nathaniel Halhed, the orientalist, a member of the House of
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Commons, and he was removed to a private asylum in Islington . Here he wrote a variety of prophetic
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pamphlets, which gained him many believers, amongst them William Sharp, the engraver, who afterwards deserted him for Joanna Southcott . Brothers, how-ever, had announced that on the 19th of November 1795 he was to be " revealed " as prince of the Hebrews and ruler of the
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world; and when this date passed without any such manifestation, what
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enthusiasm he had aroused rapidly dwindled, despite the fact that some of his earlier
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political predictions (e.g. the violent death of Louis XVI.) had been fulfilled . He died in
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London on the 25th of
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January 1824, in the house of John Einlayson, who had secured his release, and who afterwards pestered the government with an enormous claim for Brothers's maintenance .

The supporters of the Anglo-Israelite theory claim him as the first writer on their

side .

End of Article: RICHARD BROTHERS (1757-1824)
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ROBERT BROUGH (1872-1905)

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