Joseph Blakesley

English priest
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroEnglish priest
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain England
wasPriest
Work fieldReligion
Gender
Male
Birth6 March 1808
Death18 April 1885 (aged 77 years)
The details

Biography

The Very Rev. Joseph Williams Blakesley (6 March 1808 – 18 April 1885) was an English clergyman.

Life

Blakesley was born in London and was educated at St Paul's School, London, and at Corpus Christi and Trinity College, Cambridge. At university he became a member of the "Apostles Club", along with Alfred Tennyson and other literary names. In 1831 he was elected a fellow, and in 1839 a tutor of Trinity. In 1833 he took holy orders and from 1845 to 1872 held the college living of Ware, Hertfordshire. Over the signature "Hertfordshire Incumbent" he contributed a large number of letters to The Times on the leading social and political subjects of the day, and he also wrote many reviews of books for that paper.

In 1863 he was made a canon of Canterbury Cathedral and in 1872 Dean of Lincoln. Blakesley was the author of the first English Life of Aristotle (1839), an edition of Herodotus (1852–1854) in the Bibliotheca Classica, and Four Months in Algeria (1859).

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.