Online Encyclopedia

WILLIAM CURETON (1808-1864)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 638 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

WILLIAM CURETON (1808-1864)  ,
See also:
English Orientalist, was born at Westbury, in Shropshire . After being educated at the
See also:
free grammar school of
See also:
Newport, and at Christ Church, Oxford, he took orders in 1832, became
See also:
chaplain of Christ Church, sub-librarian of the Bodleian, and, in 1839, assistant keeper of
See also:
MSS. in the
See also:
British Museum . He was afterwards appointed select preacher to the university of Oxford, chaplain in ordinary to the queen, rector of St Margaret's, Westminster, and
See also:
canon of Westminster . He was elected a
See also:
fellow of the Royal Society and a trustee of the British Museum, and was also honoured by several
See also:
continental societies . He died on the 17th of
See also:
June 1864 . Cureton's most remarkable
See also:
work was the edition with notes and an English
See also:
translation of the Epistles of Ignatius to Polycarp, the Ephesians and the Romans, from a
See also:
Syriac MS. that had been found in the monastery-of St Mary Deipara, in the
See also:
desert of Nitria, near Cairo . He held that the MS. he used gave the truest text, that all other texts were inaccurate, and that the epistles contained in the MS. were the only genuine epistles of Ignatius that we possess-a view which received the support of F . C . Baur, Bunsen, and many others, but which was opposed by Charles Wordsworth and by several German scholars, and is now generally abandoned (see IGNATIUS) . Cureton supported his view by his Vindiciae Ignatianae and his Corpus Ignatianuni,—a
See also:
Complete Collection of the Ignatian Epistles, genuine, interpolated and
See also:
spurious . He also edited a partial Syriac text of the Festal Letters of St Athanasius, which was translated into English by Henry Burgess (1854), and published in the Library of Fathers of the
See also:
Holy Catholic Church; Remains of a very Ancient Recension of the Four Gospels in Syriac, hitherto unknown in
See also:
Europe; Spicilegium Syriacum, containing Remains of Bardesan, Meliton, Ambrose, Mara Bar Serapion; The third
See also:
Part of the Ecclesiastical
See also:
History of John, Bishop of Ephesus, which was translated by Payne Smith; Fragments of the Iliad of Homer from a Syriac
See also:
Palimpsest; an Arabic work known as the
See also:
Thirty-first Chapter of the
See also:
Book entitled The Lamp that guides to Salvation, written by a Christian of Tekrit; The Book of Religious and Philosophical Sects, by Muhammed al Sharastani; a Commentary on the Book of Lamentations, by
See also:
Rabbi Tanchum; and the Pillar of the Creed of the
See also:
Sunnites . Cureton also published several sermons, among which was one entitled The
See also:
Doctrine of the Trinity not Speculative but
See also:
Practical .

After his

See also:
death Dr W . Wright edited with a preface the Ancient Syriac Documents relative to the earliest Establishment of
See also:
Christianity in Edessa and the neighbouring Countries, from the
See also:
Year of our Lord's Ascension to the beginning of the
See also:
Fourth Century; discovered, edited and annotated by the
See also:
late W . Cureton .

End of Article: WILLIAM CURETON (1808-1864)
[back]
CURETES (Gr. Kobprjres and KovA-res)
[next]
CURETUS

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.