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EDMUND GIBSON (1669-1748)

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 943 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EDMUND GIBSON (1669-1748)  ,
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English divine and jurist, was born at Hampton in Westmorland in 1669 . In 1686 he was entered a scholar at Queen's College, Oxford, where in 1692 he published a valuable edition of the Saxon Chronicle with a Latin
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translation, indices and notes . This was followed in 1693 by an annotated edition of the De institution oratoria of Quintilian, and in 1695 by a translation in two volumes folio of Camden's Britannia, " with additions and improvements," in the preparation of which he had been largely assisted by William Lloyd, John Smith and other English antiquaries . Shortly after Thomas Tenison's
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elevation to the see of Canterbury in 1694 Gibson was appointed
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chaplain and librarian to the arch-bishop, and in 1703 and 1710 respectively he became rector of
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Lambeth and archdeacon of Surrey . In the discussions which arose during the reigns of William and Anne relative to the rights and privileges of the Convocation, Gibson took a very active
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part, and in a series of
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pamphlets warmly argued for the right of the archbishop to continue or prorogue even the
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lower house of that assembly . The controversy suggested to him the idea of those researches which resulted in the famous Codex
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juris ecclesiastici Anglicani, published in two volumes folio in 1713,—a
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work which discusses more learnedly and comprehensively than any other the legal rights and duties of the English clergy, and the constitution, canons and articles of the English Church . In 1716 Gibson was presented to the see of Lincoln, whence he was in 1720 translated to that of
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London, where for twenty-five years he exercised an immense influence, being regularly consulted by
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Sir Robert Walpole on all ecclesiastical affairs . While a conservative in church politics, and declaredly opposed to
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methodism, he was no persecutor, and indeed broke with Walpole on the
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Quakers'
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Relief
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Bill of 1736 . He exercised a vigilant over-sight over the morals of his diocese; and his fearless denunciation of the licentious masquerades which were popular at court finally lost him the royal favour . Among the
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literary efforts of his later years the
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principal were a series of Pastoral Letters in defence of the " gospel revelation," against " lukewarmness and "
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enthusiasm," and on various topics of the day; also the Preservative against Popery, in 3 vols. folio (1738), a compilation of numerous controversial writings of eminent
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Anglican divines, dating chiefly from the period of James II . Gibson died on the 6th of September 1948 . A second edition of the Codex juris, " revised and improved, with large additions by the author," was published at Oxford in 1761 .

Besides the

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works already mentioned, Gibson published a number of Sermons, and other works of a religious and devotional kind . The Vita Thomae Bodleii with the Historia Bibliothecae Bodleianae in the Catalogi librorum manuscriptorum (Oxford, 1697), and the Reliquiae Spelmannianae (Oxford, 1698), are also from his pen .

End of Article: EDMUND GIBSON (1669-1748)
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Additional information and Comments

Gibson died in 1748, not 1948.
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