Online Encyclopedia

CHARLES MERIVALE (1808-1893)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 169 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

CHARLES MERIVALE (1808-1893)  ,
See also:
English historian and dean of Ely, the second son of John Herman Merivale and Louisa Heath Drury, daughter of Dr Drury, head master of
See also:
Harrow, was born on the 8th of March 18o8 . His
See also:
father (1799-1844) was an English
See also:
barrister, and, from 1831, a
See also:
commissioner in bankruptcy; he collaborated with Robert Bland (1779-1825) in his Collections from the Greek
See also:
Anthology, and published some excellent
See also:
translations from
See also:
Italian and German . Charles Merivale was at Harrow School (1818 to 1824) under Dr Butler . His chief friends were Charles Wordsworth, after-wards bishop of St Andrews, and Richard Chenevix Trench, afterwards archbishop of
See also:
Dublin . In 1824 he was offered a writership in the
See also:
Indian
See also:
civil service, and went for a short time to Haileybury College, where he was distinguished for proficiency in
See also:
Oriental
See also:
languages . But he eventually decided against an Indian career, and went up to St John's College, Cambridge, in 1826 . Among other distinctions he came out as
See also:
fourth classic in 183o, and in 1833 was elected
See also:
fellow of St John's . He was a member of the Apostles' Club, his fellow-members including Tennyson, A . H . Hallam, Monckton Milnes, W . H . Thompson, Trench and James Spedding .

He was fond of athletic exercises, had played for Harrow against

See also:
Eton in 1824. and in 1829 rowed in the first inter-university boat-
See also:
race, when Oxford won . Having been ordained in 1833, he undertook college and university
See also:
work successfully, and in 1839 was appointed select preacher at
See also:
Whitehall . In 1848 he took the college living of Lawford, near Manningtree, in Essex; he married, in 185o, Judith Mary Sophia, youngest daughter of George Frere . In 1863 he was appointed
See also:
chaplain to the
See also:
Speaker of the House of
See also:
Commons, declined the professorship of
See also:
modern
See also:
history at Cambridge in 1869, but in the same
See also:
year accepted from Mr Gladstone the deanery of Ely, and until his
See also:
death on the 27th of December 1893 devoted himself to the best interests of the
See also:
cathedral . He received many honorary academical distinctions . His
See also:
principal work was A History of the Romans under the
See also:
Empire, in seven volumes, which came out between 1850 and 1862; but he wrote several smaller
See also:
historical
See also:
works, and published sermons, lectures and Latin verses . Merivale as a historiaft cannot be compared with Gibbon for virility, but he takes an eminently
See also:
common-sense and appreciative view . The chief defect of his work, inevitable at the time it was composed, is that,
See also:
drawing the materials from contemporary
See also:
memoirs rather than from inscriptions, he relies on
See also:
literary gossip rather than on numismatics and epigraphy . The dean was an elegant scholar, and his rendering of the
See also:
Hyperion of Keats into Latin verse (1862) has received high praise . See Autobiography of Dean Merivale, with selections from his correspondence, edited by his daughter, Judith A . Merivale (1899) ; and
See also:
Family Memorials, by Anna W . Merivale (1884) .

End of Article: CHARLES MERIVALE (1808-1893)
[back]
MERISTEM (Gr. Aquas-6s, divided or divisible)
[next]
HERMAN MERIVALE (1806-1874)

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.