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JOHN LINGARD (1771-1851)

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 728 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN LINGARD (1771-1851)  ,
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English historian, was born on the 5th of
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February 1771 at Winchester, where his
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father, of an ancient
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Lincolnshire peasant stock, had established himself as a carpenter . The boy's talents attracted attention, and in 1782 he was sent to the English college at
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Douai, where he continued until shortly after the declaration of war by England (1793) . He then lived as tutor in the
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family of Lord Stourton, but in
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October 1794 he settled along with seven other former members of the old Douai college at Crook Hall near Durham, where on the completion of his theological course he became
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vice-president of the reorganized seminary . In 1795 he was ordained priest, and soon afterwards undertook the charge of the chairs of natural and moral philosophy . In 28o8 he accompanied the community of Crook Hall to the new college at Ushaw, Durham, but in 1811, after declining the
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presidency of' the college at
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Maynooth, he withdrew to the secluded ,
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mission at Hornby in
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Lancashire, where for the rest of his
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life he devoted himself to
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literary pursuits . In 1817 he visited Rome, where he made researches in the Vatican Library . In r82r Pope
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Pius VII.. created him doctor of divinity and of
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canon and
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civil law; and in 1825 Leo XII. is said to have made him cardinal in petto . He died at Hornby on the 17th of
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July 1851 . Lingard wrote The Antiquities of the Anglo-Saxon Church (18o6), of which a third and greatly enlarged addition appeared in 2845 under the title The
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History and Antiquities of the Anglo-Saxon Church; containing an account of its origin, government, dottrines, worship, revenues, and clerical and monastic institutions; but the
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work with which his name is chiefly associated is A History of . England, from the first invasion by the Romans to the commencement of the reign of William III., which appeared originally in 8 vols. at intervals between 1819 and 183o . Three successive subsequent
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editions had the benefit of extensive revision by the author; a fifth edition in to vols . 8vo appeared in 1849, and a
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sixth, with life of the author by Tierney prefixed to vol. x., in 1854-1855 .

Soon after its

appearance it was translated into French, German and
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Italian . It is a work of ability and research; and, though Cardinal Wiseman's claim for its author that he was " the only impartial historian of our country" may be disregarded, the
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book remains interesting as representing the view taken of certain events in English history by a devout, but able and learned,
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Roman Catholic in the earlier
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part of the 19th century .

End of Article: JOHN LINGARD (1771-1851)
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