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HUMPHREY PRIDEAUA (1648-1724)

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 316 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HUMPHREY PRIDEAUA (1648-1724)  ,
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English divine and
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Oriental scholar, was horn of good
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family at Place, in
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Cornwall, on the 3rd of May 1648, and received his early
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education at the grammar
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schools of
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Liskeard and
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Bodmin . In 1665 he was placed at Westminster under Busby, and in 1668 went on to Christ Church, Oxford, where he took his degrees in the following order: B.A., 1672; M.A., 1675; B.D., 1682; and D.D., 1686 . His account of the famous Arundel
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marbles just given to the university appeared in 1676 . In 1679 he was appointed to the rectory of St Clement's, Oxford, and
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Hebrew lecturer at Christ Church, where he continued until
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February 1686, holding for the last three years the rectory of Bladon with
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Woodstock . In 1686 he exchanged for the benefice of Saham in Norfolk . The sympathies of Prideaux inclined to Low Churchism in religion and to Whiggism in politics, and he took an active
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part in the controversies of the day,
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publishing the following
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pamphlets: " The Validity of the Orders of the Church of England " (1688), " Letter to a Friend on the
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Present Convocation " (169o), " The Case of Clandestine Marriages stated " (1691) . Prideaux was promoted to the archdeaconry of Suffolk in December 1688, and to the deanery of Norwich (he had long been one of the canons) in
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June 1702 . In 1694 he was obliged, through
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ill
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health, to resign the rectory of Saham, and after having held the vicarage of Trowse for fourteen years (1696-171o) he found himself incapacitated from further parochial duty . He died at Norwich on the 1st of November 1724 . Many of the dean's writings were of considerable value . His
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Life of Mahomet (1697) was really a polemical tract against the deists and has now no
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biographical value . Both it and his Directions to Churchwardens (1701) passed through several
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editions .

Even greater success attended The Old and New Testament connected in the

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History of the Jews (1716), a
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work which not only displayed but stimulated research . Biographical details of his numerous publications and of his
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manuscripts are given in the Bibliotheca Cornubiensis, ii . 527-533, and iii . 1319 . A
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volume of his letters to John Ellis, some time under-secretary of state, was edited by E . M . Thompson for the Camden Society in 1875; they contain a vivid picture of Oxford life after the Restoration . An
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anonymous life (probably by Thomas Birch) appeared in 1748; it was mainly compiled from information furnished by Prideaux's son Edmund .

End of Article: HUMPHREY PRIDEAUA (1648-1724)
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