Joseph Williams Blakesley
Joseph Williams Blakesley (March 6, 1808 - April 18, 1885) was an English clergyman.
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March 6 - 1808 - April 18 - 1885 - English
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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 of London on the leading social and political subjects of the day, and he also wrote many reviews of books for that paper.
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London - St Paul's School - Corpus Christi - Trinity College, Cambridge - Apostles Club - Alfred Tennyson - 1831 - Ware, Hertfordshire - The Times
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In 1863 he was made a canon of Canterbury Cathedral and in 1872 dean of Lincoln. Dean 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).
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1863 - Canterbury Cathedral - 1872 - Lincoln - Aristotle - 1839 - Herodotus - 1852 - 1854 - 1859
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