See also:PLUMPTRE, See also:EDWARD See also:HAYES (1821-1891) , See also:English divine and See also:scholar, was See also:born in See also:London on the 6th of See also:August 1821. A scholar of University See also:College, See also:- OXFORD
- OXFORD, EARLS OF
- OXFORD, EDWARD DE VERE, 17TH EARL
- OXFORD, JOHN DE VERE, 13TH EARL OF (1443-1513)
- OXFORD, PROVISIONS OF
- OXFORD, ROBERT DE VERE, 9TH EARL OF (1362-1392)
- OXFORD, ROBERT HARLEY, 1ST
Oxford, he graduated with a See also:double-first class in 1844, and in the same See also:year he was elected See also:fellow of Brasenose College. He was ordained in 1847, and shortly afterwards appointed See also:chaplain, and then See also:professor of See also:pastoral See also:theology, at See also:- KING
- KING (O. Eng. cyning, abbreviated into cyng, cing; cf. O. H. G. chun- kuning, chun- kunig, M.H.G. kiinic, kiinec, kiinc, Mod. Ger. Konig, O. Norse konungr, kongr, Swed. konung, kung)
- KING [OF OCKHAM], PETER KING, 1ST BARON (1669-1734)
- KING, CHARLES WILLIAM (1818-1888)
- KING, CLARENCE (1842–1901)
- KING, EDWARD (1612–1637)
- KING, EDWARD (1829–1910)
- KING, HENRY (1591-1669)
- KING, RUFUS (1755–1827)
- KING, THOMAS (1730–1805)
- KING, WILLIAM (1650-1729)
- KING, WILLIAM (1663–1712)
King's College, London. In 1863 he was given a prebendal See also:- STALL (0. Eng. steall, stael, cf. Du. stal, Ger. and Swed. Stall, a common Teutonic word for a place, station, place for standing in; the root is the Indo-European std–, to stand, seen also in Latin stabulum, Greek vraO bs, and in stallion, an entire hors
stall at St See also:Paul's, and from 1869 to 1874 he was' a member of the See also:committee appointed by See also:Convocation to revise the authorized version of the Old Testament. He was See also:Boyle lecturer in 1866—1867 (" See also:Christ and Christendom "), and Grinfield lecturer on the See also:Septuagint at Oxford 1872—1874. After successively holding the livings of Pluckley and Brickley in See also:Kent, he was installed in 1881 as See also:dean of See also:Wells. He died on the 1st of See also:February 1891.
Plumptre was a See also:man of See also:great versatility and attained high reputation as a translator of the plays of See also:Sophocles (1865) and See also:Aeschylus (1868), and of the Divina commedia of See also:Dante (1886). In See also:verse his See also:main achievements were See also:Lazarus (1864), and See also:Master and Scholar (1866). Among his many theological See also:works may be mentioned An Exposition of the Epistles to the Seven Churches of See also:Asia (1877), The See also:Spirits in See also:Prison (1884), " The See also:Book of See also:Proverbs " (which he annotated in the See also:Speaker's Commentary), the " Synoptic Gospels, Acts, and II. See also:Corinthians," in See also:Bishop Ellicott's New Testament Commentary, and See also:Life of Bishop See also:Ken (1888).
End of Article: PLUMPTRE, EDWARD HAYES (1821-1891)
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