See also:GEORGE See also:JOHN See also:DOUGLAS See also:- CAMPBELL, ALEXANDER (1788–1866)
- CAMPBELL, BEATRICE STELLA (Mrs PATRICK CAMPBELL) (1865– )
- CAMPBELL, GEORGE (1719–1796)
- CAMPBELL, JOHN
- CAMPBELL, JOHN (1708-1775)
- CAMPBELL, JOHN CAMPBELL, BARON (1779-1861)
- CAMPBELL, JOHN FRANCIS
- CAMPBELL, LEWIS (1830-1908)
- CAMPBELL, REGINALD JOHN (1867— )
- CAMPBELL, THOMAS (1777—1844)
CAMPBELL
, 8th See also:duke (1823-19o0), the second son of the 7th duke, was See also:born on the 3oth of See also:April 1823, and succeeded his See also:father in April 1847
.
He had already obtained See also:notice as a writer of See also:pamphlets on the disruption of the See also:- CHURCH
- CHURCH (according to most authorities derived from the Gr. Kvpcaxov [&wµa], " the Lord's [house]," and common to many Teutonic, Slavonic and other languages under various forms—Scottish kirk, Ger. Kirche, Swed. kirka, Dan. kirke, Russ. tserkov, Buig. cerk
- CHURCH, FREDERICK EDWIN (1826-1900)
- CHURCH, GEORGE EARL (1835–1910)
- CHURCH, RICHARD WILLIAM (1815–189o)
- CHURCH, SIR RICHARD (1784–1873)
Church of See also:Scotland, which he strove to avert, and he rapidly became prominent on the Liberal See also:side in See also:parliamentary politics
.
He was a frequent and eloquent See also:speaker in the See also:House of Lords, and sat as See also:lord privy See also:seal (1852) and postmaster-See also:general (1855) in the cabinets of Lord See also:Aberdeen and Lord See also:Palmerston
.
In Mr See also:Gladstone's See also:cabinet of 1868 he was secretary of See also:state for See also:India, and somewhat infelicitously signalized his See also:term of See also:- OFFICE (from Lat. officium, " duty," " service," a shortened form of opifacium, from facere, " to do," and either the stem of opes, " wealth," " aid," or opus, " work ")
office by his refusal, against the See also:advice of the See also:Indian See also:government, to promise the See also:amir of See also:Afghanistan support against See also:Russian aggression, a course which threw that ruler into the arms of See also:Russia and was followed by the second Afghan See also:War
.
His See also:eminence alike as a See also:great Scottish See also:noble, and as a See also:British states-See also:man, was accentuated in 1871 when his son, the See also:marquess of Lorne, married Princess See also:Louise, the See also:fourth daughter of See also:Queen See also:Victoria; but in the See also:political See also:world few memorable acts on his See also:part See also:call for See also:record except his resignation of the office of lord privy seal, which he held in Mr Gladstone's See also:administration of 188o, from his inability to assent to the Irish See also:land legislation of 1881
.
He opposed the See also:Home See also:Rule See also:Bill with equal vigour, though Mr Gladstone subsequently stated that, among all the old colleagues who dissented from his course, the duke was the only one whose See also:personal relations with him remained entirely unchanged
.
Detached from party, the duke took an See also:independent position, and for many years spoke his mind with great freedom in letters to The Times on public questions, especially such as concerned the rights or interests of landowners
.
He was no less active on scientific questions in their relation to See also:religion, which he earnestly strove to reconcile with the progress of See also:discovery
.
With this aim he published The Reign of See also:Law (1866), Primeval Man (1869), The Unity of Nature (1884), The Unseen See also:Foundations of Society (1893), and other essays
.
He also wrote on the Eastern question, with especial reference to India, the See also:history and antiquities of See also:Iona, patronage in the Church of Scotland, and many other subjects
.
The duke (to whose Scottish See also:title was added a dukedom of the See also:United See also:Kingdom in 1892) died on the .24th of April 1900
.
He was thrice married: first (1844) to a daughter of the second duke of See also:Sutherland (d
.
1878); secondly (1881) to a daughter of See also:Bishop Claughton of St Albans (d
.
1894); and thirdly (1895) to Ina See also:Erskine M`See also:Neill
.
Few men of the duke's era displayed more versatility of See also:intellect, and he was remarkable among the men of his See also:- TIME (0. Eng. Lima, cf. Icel. timi, Swed. timme, hour, Dan. time; from the root also seen in " tide," properly the time of between the flow and ebb of the sea, cf. O. Eng. getidan, to happen, " even-tide," &c.; it is not directly related to Lat. tempus)
- TIME, MEASUREMENT OF
- TIME, STANDARD
time for his lofty eloquence
.
He was succeeded as 9th duke by his eldest son See also:JOHN See also:DOUGLAS SUTHERLAND See also:- CAMPBELL, ALEXANDER (1788–1866)
- CAMPBELL, BEATRICE STELLA (Mrs PATRICK CAMPBELL) (1865– )
- CAMPBELL, GEORGE (1719–1796)
- CAMPBELL, JOHN
- CAMPBELL, JOHN (1708-1775)
- CAMPBELL, JOHN CAMPBELL, BARON (1779-1861)
- CAMPBELL, JOHN FRANCIS
- CAMPBELL, LEWIS (1830-1908)
- CAMPBELL, REGINALD JOHN (1867— )
- CAMPBELL, THOMAS (1777—1844)
CAMPBELL (1845- ), whose See also:marriage in 1871 to H.R.H
.
Princess Louise gave him a See also:special prominence in See also:English public See also:life
.
He was See also:governor-general of See also:Canada from 1878 to 1883; member of See also:parliament for See also:South See also:Manchester, in the Unionist See also:interest, 1895 to 'goo; and he also became known as a writer both in See also:prose and See also:verse
.
In 1907 he published his reminiscences, Pages from the Past
.
See the Autobiography and See also:Memoirs of the 8th duke, edited by his widow (1906), which is full of interesting See also:historical and personal detail
.
(P
.
C
.
Y.; H
.
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