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JOHN RICHARD GREEN (1837—1883)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 534 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN RICHARD GREEN (1837—1883)  ,
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English historian, was born at Oxford on 12th December 1837, and educated at Magdalen College School and at Jesus College, where he obtained an open scholarship . On leaving Oxford he took orders and became the incumbent of St Philip's, Stepney . His preaching was eloquent and able; he worked diligently among his poor parishioners and won their affection by his ready sympathy . Meanwhile he studied
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history in a scholarly fashion, and wrote much for the Saturday Review . Partly because his
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health was weak and partly because he ceased to agree with the teaching of the Church of England, he abandoned clerical
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life and devoted himself to history; in 1868 he took the
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post of librarian at
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Lambeth, but his health was already breaking down and he was attacked by consumption . His Short History of the English
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People (1874) at once attained extraordinary popularity, and was afterwards
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expanded in a
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work of four volumes (1877—188o) . Green is pre-eminently a picturesque historian; he had a vivid
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imagination and a keen eye for colour . His chief aim was to depict the progressive life of the English people rather than to write a
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political history of the English state . In accomplishing this aim he worked up the results of wide
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reading into a series of brilliant pictures . While generally accurate in his statement of facts, and showing a
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firm grasp of the main tendency of a period, he often builds more on his authorities than is warranted by their words, and is
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apt to overlook points which would have forced him to modify his representations and
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lower the tone of his colours . From his animated pages thousands have learned to take pleasure in the history of their own people, but could scarcely learn to appreciate the complexity inherent in all
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historical
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movement . His style is extremely bright, but it lacks sobriety and presents some affectations .

His later histories, The Making of England (1882) and The

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Conquest of England (1883), are more soberly written than his earlier books, and are valuable contributions to historical knowledge . Green died at Mentone on the 7th of March 1883 . He was a singularly attractive man, of wide intellectual sympathies and an enthusiastic temperament; his good-humour was unfailing and he was a brilliant talker; and his work was done with admirable courage in spite of
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ill-health . It is said that Mrs, Humphry Ward's Robert Elsmere is largely a portrait of him . In 1877 Green married
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Miss Alice Stopford; and Mrs Green, besides writing a memoir of her
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husband, prefixed to the 1888 edition of his Short History, has herself done valuable work as an historian, particularly in her Henry II. in the " English Statesmen " series (1888), her
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Town Life in the' 5th Century (1894), and The Making.of Ireland and its Undoing (1908) . See the Letters of J . R . Green (1901), edited by Leslie Stephen . (W .

End of Article: JOHN RICHARD GREEN (1837—1883)
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