Online Encyclopedia

THOMAS CHENERY (1826-1884)

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 77 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS CHENERY (1826-1884)  ,
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English scholar and editor of The Times, was born in 1826 at Barbados . He was educated at
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Eton and Caius College, Cambridge . Having been called to the bar, he went out to Constantinople as The Times correspondent just before the
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Crimean War, and it was under the influence there of Algernon Smythe (afterwards Lord Strangford) that he first turned to those philological studies in which he became eminent . After the war he returned to
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London and wrote regularly for The Times for many years, eventually succeeding Delane as editor in 1877 . He was then an experienced publicist, particularly well versed in
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Oriental affairs, an indefatigable worker, with a rapid and comprehensive
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judgment, though he lacked Delane's intuition for public opinion . It was as an Orientalist, however, that he had meantime earned the highest reputation, his knowledge of Arabic and
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Hebrew being almost unrivalled and his gift for
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languages exceptional . In 1868 he was appointed Lord Almoner's professor of Arabic at Oxford, and retained his position until he became editor of The Times . He was one of the
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company of revisers of the Old Testament . He was secretary forsome time to the Royal
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Asiatic Society, and published learned
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editions of the Arabic classic The Assemblies of Al-Hariri and of the Machberoth Ithiel . He died in London on the 11th of
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February 1884 .

End of Article: THOMAS CHENERY (1826-1884)
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