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Edward Gibbon

Edward Gibbon FRS (/ˈɡɪbən/; 8 May 1737[1] – 16 January 1794) was an English essayist, historian, and politician. His most important work, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, published in six volumes between 1776 and 1788, is known for the quality and irony of its prose, its use of primary sources, and its polemical criticism of organised religion.[2]

Edward Gibbon
Portrait by Joshua Reynolds
Member of Parliament for Lymington
In office
1781–1784
Preceded bySamuel Salt
Edward Eliot
Succeeded bySamuel Salt
Wilbraham Tollemache
Member of Parliament for Liskeard
In office
1774–1780
Preceded byHarry Burrard
Thomas Dummer
Succeeded byHarry Burrard
William Manning
Personal details
Born8 May 1737
Putney, Surrey, England
Died16 January 1794(1794-01-16) (aged 56)
London, England
Political partyWhig
Alma materMagdalen College, Oxford
OccupationEssayist, historian, politician
Signature

Early life: 1737–1752

Edward Gibbon was born in 1737, the son of Edward and Judith Gibbon at Lime Grove, in the town of Putney, Surrey. He had six siblings, five brothers and one sister, all of whom died in infancy. His grandfather, also named Edward, had lost his assets as a result of the South Sea bubble stock-market collapse in 1720 but eventually regained much of his wealth. Gibbon's father was thus able to inherit a substantial estate.[3] His paternal grandmother, Catherine Acton, was granddaughter of Sir Walter Acton, 2nd Baronet.[4]

As a youth, Gibbon's health was under constant threat. He described himself as "a puny child, neglected by my Mother, starved by my nurse". At age nine, he was sent to Dr. Woddeson's school at Kingston upon Thames (now Kingston Grammar School), shortly after which his mother died. He then took up residence in the Westminster School boarding house, owned by his adored "Aunt Kitty", Catherine Porten. Soon after she died in 1786, he remembered her as rescuing him from his mother's disdain, and imparting "the first rudiments of knowledge, the first exercise of reason, and a taste for books which is still the pleasure and glory of my life".[5] From 1747 Gibbon spent time at the family home in Buriton.[6] By 1751, Gibbon's reading was already extensive and certainly pointed toward his future pursuits: Laurence Echard's Roman History (1713), William Howel(l)'s An Institution of General History (1680–85), and several of the 65 volumes of the acclaimed Universal History from the Earliest Account of Time (1747–1768).[7]

Career

Oxford, Lausanne, and a religious journey: 1752–1758

Following a stay at Bath in 1752 to improve his health, at the age of 15, Gibbon was sent by his father to Magdalen College, Oxford, where he was enrolled as a gentleman-commoner. He was ill-suited, however, to the college atmosphere, and later rued his 14 months there as the "most idle and unprofitable" of his life. Because he himself says so in his autobiography, it used to be thought that his penchant for "theological controversy" (his aunt's influence) fully bloomed when he came under the spell of the deist or rationalist theologian Conyers Middleton (1683–1750), the author of Free Inquiry into the Miraculous Powers (1749). In that tract, Middleton denied the validity of such powers; Gibbon promptly objected, or so the argument used to run. The product of that disagreement, with some assistance from the work of Catholic Bishop Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet (1627–1704), and that of the Elizabethan Jesuit Robert Parsons (1546–1610), yielded the most memorable event of his time at Oxford: his conversion to Roman Catholicism on 8 June 1753. He was further "corrupted" by the 'free thinking' deism of the playwright/poet couple David and Lucy Mallet;[8] and finally Gibbon's father, already "in despair," had had enough. David Womersley has shown, however, that Gibbon's claim to having been converted by a reading of Middleton is very unlikely, and was introduced only into the final draft of the "Memoirs" in 1792–93.[9] Bowersock suggests that Gibbon fabricated the Middleton story retrospectively in his anxiety about the impact of the French Revolution and Edmund Burke's claim that it was provoked by the French philosophes, so influential on Gibbon.

Within weeks of his conversion, the adolescent was removed from Oxford and sent to live under the care and tutelage of Daniel Pavillard, Reformed pastor of Lausanne, Switzerland. There, he made one of his life's two great friendships, that of Jacques Georges Deyverdun (the French-language translator of Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther), and that of John Baker Holroyd (later Lord Sheffield). Just a year and a half later, after his father threatened to disinherit him, on Christmas Day, 1754, he reconverted to Protestantism. "The various articles of the Romish creed," he wrote, "disappeared like a dream".[10] He remained in Lausanne for five intellectually productive years, a period that greatly enriched Gibbon's already immense aptitude for scholarship and erudition: he read Latin literature; travelled throughout Switzerland studying its cantons' constitutions; and studied the works of Hugo Grotius, Samuel von Pufendorf, John Locke, Pierre Bayle, and Blaise Pascal.

Thwarted romance

He also met the one romance in his life: the daughter of the pastor of Crassy, a young woman named Suzanne Curchod, who was later to become the wife of Louis XVI's finance minister Jacques Necker, and the mother of Madame de Staël. The two developed a warm affinity; Gibbon proceeded to propose marriage,[11] but ultimately this was out of the question, blocked both by his father's staunch disapproval and Curchod's equally staunch reluctance to leave Switzerland. Gibbon returned to England in August 1758 to face his father. No refusal of the elder's wishes could be allowed. Gibbon put it this way: "I sighed as a lover, I obeyed as a son."[12] He proceeded to cut off all contact with Curchod, even as she vowed to wait for him. Their final emotional break apparently came at Ferney, France, in early 1764, though they did see each other at least one more time a year later.[13]

First fame and the Grand tour: 1758–1765

 
Portchester Castle came under Gibbon's command for a brief period while he was an officer in the South Hampshire Militia.[14]

Upon his return to England, Gibbon published his first book, Essai sur l'Étude de la Littérature in 1761, which produced an initial taste of celebrity and distinguished him, in Paris at least, as a man of letters.[15] From 1759 to 1770, Gibbon served on active duty and in reserve with the South Hampshire Militia, his deactivation in December 1762 coinciding with the militia's dispersal at the end of the Seven Years' War.[16] The following year, he returned, via Paris, to Lausanne, where he made the acquaintance of a "prudent worthy young man" William Guise. On 18 April 1764, he and Guise set off for Italy, crossed the Alps, and after spending the summer in Florence arrived in Rome, via Lucca, Pisa, Livorno and Siena, in early October.[17] In his autobiography, Gibbon vividly records his rapture when he finally neared "the great object of [my] pilgrimage":

...at the distance of twenty-five years I can neither forget nor express the strong emotions which agitated my mind as I first approached and entered the eternal City. After a sleepless night, I trod, with a lofty step the ruins of the Forum; each memorable spot where Romulus stood, or Tully spoke, or Caesar fell, was at once present to my eye; and several days of intoxication were lost or enjoyed before I could descend to a cool and minute investigation.[18]

Here, Gibbon first conceived the idea of composing a history of the city, later extended to the entire empire, a moment he described later as his "Capitoline vision":[19]

It was at Rome, on the fifteenth of October 1764, as I sat musing amidst the ruins of the Capitol, while the barefooted fryars were singing vespers in the temple of Jupiter, that the idea of writing the decline and fall of the City first started to my mind.[20]

Womersley (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, p. 12) notes the existence of "good reasons" to doubt the statement's accuracy. Elaborating, Pocock ("Classical History," ¶ #2) refers to it as a likely "creation of memory" or a "literary invention", given that Gibbon, in his autobiography, claimed that his journal dated the reminiscence to 15 October, when in fact the journal gives no date.

Late career: 1765–1776

Work

In June 1765, Gibbon returned to his father's house, and remained there until the latter's death in 1770.[21] These five years were considered by Gibbon as the worst of his life, but he tried to remain busy by making early attempts towards writing full histories. His first historical narrative known as the History of Switzerland, which represented Gibbon's love for Switzerland, was never published nor finished. Even under the guidance of Deyverdun (a German translator for Gibbons), Gibbon became too critical of himself, and completely abandoned the project, only writing 60 pages of text.[22] However, after Gibbon's death, his writings on Switzerland's history were discovered and published by Lord Sheffield in 1815. Soon after abandoning his History of Switzerland, Gibbon made another attempt towards completing a full history.

His second work, Memoires Litteraires de la Grande Bretagne, was a two-volume set which described the literary and social conditions of England at the time, such as Lord Lyttelton's history of Henry II and Nathaniel Lardner's The Credibility of the Gospel History.[23] Gibbon's Memoires Litteraires failed to gain any notoriety and was considered a flop by fellow historians and literary scholars.[24]

 
Blue plaque to Gibbon on Bentinck Street, London

After he tended to his father's estate—which was by no means in good condition— quite enough remained for Gibbon to settle fashionably in London at 7 Bentinck Street, free of financial concern. By February 1773, he was writing in earnest, but not without the occasional self-imposed distraction. He took to London society quite easily, joined the better social clubs, including Dr. Johnson's Literary Club, and looked in from time to time on his friend Holroyd in Sussex. He succeeded Oliver Goldsmith at the Royal Academy as 'professor in ancient history' (honorary but prestigious). In late 1774, he was initiated as a Freemason of the Premier Grand Lodge of England.[25]

He was also, perhaps least productively in that same year, 1774, returned to the House of Commons for Liskeard, Cornwall through the intervention of his relative and patron, Edward Eliot.[26] He became the archetypal back-bencher, benignly "mute" and "indifferent," his support of the Whig ministry invariably automatic. Gibbon's indolence in that position, perhaps fully intentional, subtracted little from the progress of his writing. Gibbon lost the Liskeard seat in 1780 when Eliot joined the opposition, taking with him "the Electors of Leskeard [who] are commonly of the same opinion as Mr. El[l]iot." (Murray, p. 322.) The following year, owing to the good grace of Prime Minister Lord North, he was again returned to Parliament, this time for Lymington on a by-election.[27]

The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire: 1776–1788

In a distant age and climate the tragic scene of the death of Hosein will awaken the sympathy of the coldest reader.

— Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire[28]

After several rewrites, with Gibbon "often tempted to throw away the labours of seven years," the first volume of what was to become his life's major achievement, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, was published on 17 February 1776. Through 1777, the reading public eagerly consumed three editions, for which Gibbon was rewarded handsomely: two-thirds of the profits, amounting to approximately £1,000.[29] Biographer Leslie Stephen wrote that thereafter, "His fame was as rapid as it has been lasting." And as regards this first volume, "Some warm praise from David Hume overpaid the labour of ten years."

Volumes II and III appeared on 1 March 1781, eventually rising "to a level with the previous volume in general esteem." Volume IV was finished in June 1784;[30] the final two were completed during a second Lausanne sojourn (September 1783 to August 1787) where Gibbon reunited with his friend Deyverdun in leisurely comfort. By early 1787, he was "straining for the goal" and with great relief the project was finished in June. Gibbon later wrote:

It was on the day, or rather the night, of 27 June 1787, between the hours of eleven and twelve, that I wrote the last lines of the last page in a summer-house in my garden...I will not dissemble the first emotions of joy on the recovery of my freedom, and perhaps the establishment of my fame. But my pride was soon humbled, and a sober melancholy was spread over my mind by the idea that I had taken my everlasting leave of an old and agreeable companion, and that, whatsoever might be the future fate of my history, the life of the historian must be short and precarious.[31]

Volumes IV, V, and VI finally reached the press in May 1788, their publication having been delayed since March so it could coincide with a dinner party celebrating Gibbon's 51st birthday (the 8th).[32] Mounting a bandwagon of praise for the later volumes were such contemporary luminaries as Adam Smith, William Robertson, Adam Ferguson, Lord Camden, and Horace Walpole. Adam Smith told Gibbon that "by the universal assent of every man of taste and learning, whom I either know or correspond with, it sets you at the very head of the whole literary tribe at present existing in Europe."[33] In November 1788, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, the main proposer being his good friend Lord Sheffield.[34]

In 1783 Gibbon had been intrigued by the cleverness of Sheffield's 12 year-old eldest daughter, Maria, and he proposed to teach her himself. Over the following years he continued, creating a girl of sixteen who was both well educated, confident and determined to choose her own husband. Gibbon described her as a "mixture of just observation and lively imagery, the strong sense of a man expressed with the easy elegance of a female".[35]

Later life: 1789–1794

 
Gibbon's memorial tablet on the Sheffield Mausoleum in St Andrew & St Mary The Virgin's church in Fletching, East Sussex

The years following Gibbon's completion of The History were filled largely with sorrow and increasing physical discomfort. He had returned to London in late 1787 to oversee the publication process alongside Lord Sheffield. With that accomplished, in 1789 it was back to Lausanne only to learn of and be "deeply affected" by the death of Deyverdun, who had willed Gibbon his home, La Grotte. He resided there with little commotion, took in the local society, received a visit from Sheffield in 1791, and "shared the common abhorrence" of the French Revolution. In 1793, word came of Lady Sheffield's death; Gibbon immediately left Lausanne and set sail to comfort a grieving but composed Sheffield. His health began to fail critically in December, and at the turn of the new year, he was on his last legs.[36]

Among Edward Gibbon's maladies was gout.[37] Gibbon is also believed to have suffered from an extreme case of scrotal swelling, probably a hydrocele testis, a condition which causes the scrotum to swell with fluid in a compartment overlying either testicle.[38] In an age when close-fitting clothes were fashionable, his condition led to a chronic and disfiguring inflammation that left Gibbon a lonely figure.[39] As his condition worsened, he underwent numerous procedures to alleviate the condition, but with no enduring success. In early January, the last of a series of three operations caused an unremitting peritonitis to set in and spread, from which he died.

The "English giant of the Enlightenment"[40] finally succumbed at 12:45 pm, 16 January 1794 at age 56. He was buried in the Sheffield Mausoleum attached to the north transept of the Church of St Mary and St Andrew, Fletching, East Sussex,[41] having died in Fletching while staying with his great friend, Lord Sheffield. Gibbon's estate was valued at approximately £26,000. He left most of his property to cousins. As stipulated in his will, Sheffield oversaw the sale of his library at auction to William Beckford for £950.[42] What happened next suggests that Beckford may have known of Gibbon's moralistic, 'impertinent animadversion' at his expense in the presence of the Duchess of Devonshire at Lausanne. Gibbon's wish that his 6,000-book library would not be locked up 'under the key of a jealous master' was effectively denied by Beckford who retained it in Lausanne until 1801 before inspecting it, then locking it up again until at least as late as 1818 before giving most of the books back to Gibbon's physician Dr Scholl who had helped negotiate the sale in the first place. Beckford's annotated copy of the Decline and Fall turned up in Christie's in 1953, complete with his critique of what he considered the author's 'ludicrous self-complacency ... your frequent distortion of historical Truth to provoke a gibe, or excite a sneer ... your ignorance of oriental languages [etc.]'.[43]

Legacy

Edward Gibbon's central thesis in his explanation of how the Roman Empire fell, that it was due to embracing Christianity, is not widely accepted by scholars today. Gibbon argued that with the empire's new Christian character, large sums of wealth that would have otherwise been used in the secular affairs in promoting the state were transferred to promoting the activities of the Church. However, the pre-Christian empire also spent large financial sums on religious affairs and it is unclear whether or not the change of religion increased the amount of resources the empire spent on religion. Gibbon further argued that new attitudes in Christianity caused many Christians of wealth to renounce their lifestyles and enter a monastic lifestyle, and so stop participating in the support of the empire. However, while many Christians of wealth did become monastics, this paled in comparison to the participants in the imperial bureaucracy. Although Gibbon further pointed out that the importance Christianity placed on peace caused a decline in the number of people serving the military, the decline was so small as to be negligible for the army's effectiveness.[44][45]

Gibbon's work has been criticised for its scathing view of Christianity as laid down in chapters XV and XVI, a situation which resulted in the banning of the book in several countries. Gibbon's alleged crime was disrespecting, and none too lightly, the character of sacred Christian doctrine, by "treat[ing] the Christian church as a phenomenon of general history, not a special case admitting supernatural explanations and disallowing criticism of its adherents". More specifically, the chapters excoriated the church for "supplanting in an unnecessarily destructive way the great culture that preceded it" and for "the outrage of [practising] religious intolerance and warfare".[46]

Gibbon, in letters to Holroyd and others, expected some type of church-inspired backlash, but the harshness of the ensuing torrents exceeded anything he or his friends had anticipated. Contemporary detractors such as Joseph Priestley and Richard Watson stoked the nascent fire, but the most severe of these attacks was an "acrimonious" piece by the young cleric, Henry Edwards Davis.[47] Gibbon subsequently published his Vindication in 1779, in which he categorically denied Davis' "criminal accusations", branding him a purveyor of "servile plagiarism."[48] Davis followed Gibbon's Vindication with yet another reply (1779).

Gibbon's apparent antagonism to Christian doctrine spilled over into the Jewish faith, leading to charges of anti-Semitism. For example, he wrote:

From the reign of Nero to that of Antoninus Pius, the Jews discovered a fierce impatience of the dominion of Rome, which repeatedly broke out in the most furious massacres and insurrections. Humanity is shocked at the recital of the horrid cruelties which they committed in the cities of Egypt, of Cyprus, and of Cyrene, where they dwelt in treacherous friendship with the unsuspecting natives; and we are tempted to applaud the severe retaliation which was exercised by the arms of legions against a race of fanatics, whose dire and credulous superstition seemed to render them the implacable enemies not only of the Roman government, but also of mankind.[49]

Influence

 
Portrait of Edward Gibbon by Henry Walton

Gibbon is considered to be a son of the Enlightenment and this is reflected in his famous verdict on the history of the Middle Ages: "I have described the triumph of barbarism and religion."[50] However, politically, he aligned himself with the conservative Edmund Burke's rejection of the radical egalitarian movements of the time as well as with Burke's dismissal of overly rationalistic applications of the "rights of man".[51]

Gibbon's work has been praised for its style, his piquant epigrams and its effective irony. Winston Churchill memorably noted in My Early Life, "I set out upon...Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire [and] was immediately dominated both by the story and the style. ...I devoured Gibbon. I rode triumphantly through it from end to end and enjoyed it all."[52] Churchill modelled much of his own literary style on Gibbon's. Like Gibbon, he dedicated himself to producing a "vivid historical narrative, ranging widely over period and place and enriched by analysis and reflection."[53]

Unusually for the 18th century, Gibbon was never content with secondhand accounts when the primary sources were accessible (though most of these were drawn from well-known printed editions). "I have always endeavoured," he says, "to draw from the fountain-head; that my curiosity, as well as a sense of duty, has always urged me to study the originals; and that, if they have sometimes eluded my search, I have carefully marked the secondary evidence, on whose faith a passage or a fact were reduced to depend."[54] In this insistence upon the importance of primary sources, Gibbon is considered by many to be one of the first modern historians:

In accuracy, thoroughness, lucidity, and comprehensive grasp of a vast subject, the 'History' is unsurpassable. It is the one English history which may be regarded as definitive...Whatever its shortcomings the book is artistically imposing as well as historically unimpeachable as a vast panorama of a great period.[55]

The subject of Gibbon's writing, as well as his ideas and style, have influenced other writers. Besides his influence on Churchill, Gibbon was also a model for Isaac Asimov in his writing of The Foundation Trilogy, which he said involved "a little bit of cribbin' from the works of Edward Gibbon".[56]

Evelyn Waugh admired Gibbon's style, but not his secular viewpoint. In Waugh's 1950 novel Helena, the early Christian author Lactantius worried about the possibility of "'a false historian, with the mind of Cicero or Tacitus and the soul of an animal,' and he nodded towards the gibbon who fretted his golden chain and chattered for fruit."[57]

Monographs by Gibbon

  • Essai sur l’Étude de la Littérature (London: Becket & De Hondt, 1761).
  • Critical Observations on the Sixth Book of [Vergil's] 'The Aeneid' (London: Elmsley, 1770).
  • The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (vol. I, 1776; vols. II, III, 1781; vols. IV, V, VI, 1788–1789). all London: Strahan & Cadell.
  • A Vindication of some passages in the fifteenth and sixteenth chapters of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (London: J. Dodsley, 1779).
  • Mémoire Justificatif pour servir de Réponse à l’Exposé, etc. de la Cour de France (London: Harrison & Brooke, 1779).

Other writings by Gibbon

  • "Lettre sur le gouvernement de Berne" [Letter No. IX. Mr. Gibbon to *** on the Government of Berne], in Miscellaneous Works, First (1796) edition, vol. 1 (below). Scholars differ on the date of its composition (Norman, D.M. Low: 1758–59; Pocock: 1763–64).
  • Mémoires Littéraires de la Grande-Bretagne. co-author: Georges Deyverdun (2 vols.: vol. 1, London: Becket & De Hondt, 1767; vol. 2, London: Heydinger, 1768).
  • Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon, Esq., ed. John Lord Sheffield (2 vols., London: Cadell & Davies, 1796; 5 vols., London: J. Murray, 1814; 3 vols., London: J. Murray, 1815). Includes Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon, Esq..
  • Autobiographies of Edward Gibbon, ed. John Murray (London: J. Murray, 1896). EG's complete memoirs (six drafts) from the original manuscripts.
  • The Private Letters of Edward Gibbon, 2 vols., ed. Rowland E. Prothero (London: J. Murray, 1896).
  • The works of Edward Gibbon, Volume 3 1906.
  • Gibbon's Journal to 28 January 1763, ed. D.M. Low (London: Chatto and Windus, 1929).
  • Le Journal de Gibbon à Lausanne, ed. Georges A. Bonnard (Lausanne: Librairie de l'Université, 1945).
  • Miscellanea Gibboniana, eds. G.R. de Beer, L. Junod, G.A. Bonnard (Lausanne: Librairie de l'Université, 1952).
  • The Letters of Edward Gibbon, 3 vols., ed. J.E. Norton (London: Cassell & Co., 1956). vol. 1: 1750–1773; vol. 2: 1774–1784; vol. 3: 1784–1794. cited as 'Norton, Letters'.
  • Gibbon's Journey from Geneva to Rome, ed. G.A. Bonnard (London: Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1961). journal.
  • Edward Gibbon: Memoirs of My Life, ed. G.A. Bonnard (New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1969; 1966). portions of EG's memoirs arranged chronologically, omitting repetition.
  • The English Essays of Edward Gibbon, ed. Patricia Craddock (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972); hb: ISBN 0-19-812496-1.

See also

Notes

Most of this article, including quotations unless otherwise noted, has been adapted from Stephen's entry on Edward Gibbon in the Dictionary of National Biography.[36]

References

  1. ^ O.S. 27 April. Gibbon's birthday is 27 April 1737 of the old style (O.S.) Julian calendar; England adopted the new style (N.S.) Gregorian calendar in 1752, and thereafter Gibbon's birthday was celebrated on 8 May 1737 N.S.
  2. ^ The most recent and also the first critical edition, in three volumes, is that of David Womersley. For commentary on Gibbon's irony and insistence on primary sources whenever available, see Womersley, "Introduction". While the larger part of Gibbon's caustic view of Christianity is declared within the text of chapters XV and XVI, Gibbon rarely neglects to note its baleful influence throughout the remaining volumes of the Decline and Fall.
  3. ^ D. M. Low, Edward Gibbon. 1737–1794 (London: Chatto & Windus, 1937), p. 7.
  4. ^ Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 106th edition, vol. 1, ed. Charles Mosley, Burke's Peerage Ltd, 1999, p. 28
  5. ^ Norton, Letters, vol. 3, 10/5/[17]86, 45–48.
  6. ^ "Local Luminaries".
  7. ^ Stephen, DNB, p. 1130; Pocock, Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon, 29–40. At age 14, Gibbon was "a prodigy of uncontrolled reading"; Gibbon himself admitted an "indiscriminate appetite". p. 29.
  8. ^ Pocock, Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon. for Middleton, see pp. 45–47; for Bossuet, p. 47; for the Mallets, p. 23; Robert Parsons [or Persons], A Christian directory: The first booke of the Christian exercise, appertaining to resolution, (London, 1582). In his 1796 edition of Gibbon's Memoirs, Lord Sheffield claims that Gibbon directly connected his Catholic conversion to his reading of Parsons.  Womersley, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, p. 9.
  9. ^ Womersley, Gibbon and the 'Watchmen of the Holy City': The Historian and His Reputation, 1776–1815 (Oxford University Press, 2002), as cited by G. M. Bowersock in The New York Review of Books, 25 November 2010, p. 56.
  10. ^ John Murray (ed.). The Autobiographies of Edward Gibbon. (London: John Murray, 1896), p. 137.
  11. ^ Norton, Biblio, p. 2;   Letters, vol. 1, p. 396. a concise summary of their relationship is found at 396–401.
  12. ^ Murray, p. 239. The phrase, "sighed [etc.]" alludes to the play Polyeucte by "the father of French tragedy," Pierre Corneille. Womersley, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, p. 11.
  13. ^ Womersley, 11–12.
  14. ^ Goodall 2008, p. 38
  15. ^ In the Essai, the 24-year-old boldly braved the reigning philosoph[e]ic fashion to uphold the studious values and practices of the érudits (antiquarian scholars). Womersley, p. 11; and The Miscellaneous Works, First edition, vol. 2.
  16. ^ Womersley, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, pp. 11, 12. Gibbon was commissioned a captain and resigned a lieutenant colonel, later crediting his service with providing him "a larger introduction into the English world." There was further, the matter of a vast utility: "The discipline and evolutions of a modern battalion gave me a clearer notion of the phalanx and the legion; and the captain of the Hampshire grenadiers (the reader may smile) has not been useless to the historian of the Roman empire." Murray, p. 190.
  17. ^ Edward Chaney, "Reiseerlebnis und 'Traumdeutung' bei Edward Gibbon und William Beckford", Europareisen politisch-sozialer Eliten im 18.Jahrhundert, eds. J. Rees, W. Siebers and H. Tilgner (Berlin 2002), pp.244-45; cf. Chaney, "Gibbon, Beckford and the Interpretation of Dreams," pp. 40-41.
  18. ^ Chaney, p. 40 and Murray, pp. 266–267.
  19. ^ Pocock, "Classical History," ¶ #2.
  20. ^ Murray, p. 302.
  21. ^ Cecil, Algernon. Six Oxford thinkers: Edward Gibbon, John Henry Newman, R.W. Church, James Anthony Froude, Walter Pater, Lord Morley of Blackburn. London: John Murray, 1909, p. 59.
  22. ^ Cecil, Algernon. Six Oxford thinkers: Edward Gibbon, John Henry Newman, R.W. Church, James Anthony Froude, Walter Pater, Lord Morley of Blackburn. London: John Murray, 1909, p. 60.
  23. ^ Cecil, Algernon. Six Oxford thinkers: Edward Gibbon, John Henry Newman, R.W. Church, James Anthony Froude, Walter Pater, Lord Morley of Blackburn. London: John Murray, 1909, p. 61.
  24. ^ Morley, John (May 1878). English Men of Letters. Macmillan and Co. pp. 61–62. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  25. ^ i.e., in London's Lodge of Friendship No. 3. see Gibbon's freemasonry.
  26. ^ "Gibbon, Edward (1737–94), of Bentinck St., London; Buriton, Hants; and Lenborough, Bucks". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  27. ^ Gibbon's Whiggery was solidly conservative: in favour of the propertied oligarchy while upholding the subject's rights under the rule of law; though staunchly against ideas such as the natural rights of man and popular sovereignty, what he referred to as "the wild & mischievous system of Democracy" (Dickinson, "Politics," 178–179). Gibbon also served on the government's Board of Trade and Plantations from 1779 until 1782, when the Board was abolished. The subsequent promise of an embassy position in Paris ultimately aborted, serendipitously leaving Gibbon free to focus on his great project.
  28. ^ Gibbon, Edward (1911). The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Volume 5. London. pp. 391–392.
  29. ^ Norton, Biblio, pp. 37, 45. Gibbon sold the copyrights to the remaining editions of volume 1 and the remaining 5 volumes to publishers Strahan & Cadell for £8000. The great History earned the author a total of about £9000.
  30. ^ Norton, Biblio, pp. 49, 57. Both Norton and Womersley (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, p. 14) establish that vol. IV was substantially complete by the end of 1783.
  31. ^ Murray, pp. 333–334
  32. ^ Norton, Biblio, p. 61.
  33. ^ The Autobiography and Correspondence of Edward Gibbon, the Historian. Alex. Murray. 1869. p. 345.
  34. ^ "Fellow Details". Royal Society. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  35. ^ Stern, Marvin (2004). "Stanley [née Holroyd], Lady Maria Josepha (1771–1863), letter writer and liberal advocate". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/74489. Retrieved 4 January 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  36. ^ a b Original text: Stephen, Leslie (1890). "Gibbon, Edward" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 21. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 250–256.
  37. ^ Roy Porter and G.S. Rousseau (1998). "Gout, The Patrician Malady". The New York Times.
  38. ^ Jellinek, E. H. (1999). "'Varnish the business for the ladies': Edward Gibbon's decline and fall". J R Soc Med. 92 (7): 374–79. doi:10.1177/014107689909200716. PMC 1297297. PMID 10615283.
  39. ^ After more than two centuries, the exact nature of Gibbon's ailment remains a bone of contention. Patricia Craddock, in a very full and graphic account of Gibbon's last days, notes that Sir Gavin de Beer's medical analysis of 1949 "makes it certain that Gibbon did not have a true hydrocele...and highly probable that he was suffering both from a 'large and irreducible hernia' and cirrhosis of the liver." Also worthy of note are Gibbon's congenial and even joking moods while in excruciating pain as he neared the end. Both authors report this late bit of Gibbonian bawdiness: "Why is a fat man like a Cornish Borough? Because he never sees his member." see Womersley, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, p. 16; Craddock, Luminous Historian, 334–342; and Beer, "Malady".
  40. ^ so styled by the "unrivalled master of Enlightenment studies," historian Franco Venturi (1914–1994) in his Utopia and Reform in the Enlightenment (Cambridge: 1971), p. 132. See Pocock, Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon, p. 6; x.
  41. ^ "Sheffield Mausoleum - Mausolea & Monuments Trust". www.mmtrust.org.uk.
  42. ^ Womersley, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 17–18.
  43. ^ Edward Chaney, "Gibbon, Beckford and the Interpretation of Dreams, Waking Thoughts, and Incidents", The Beckford Society Annual Lectures 2000-2003 (Beckford Society, 2004), pp. 45-47
  44. ^ Heather, Peter. The fall of the Roman Empire. Oxford University Press, 2005, 122–123.
  45. ^ Gerberding, Richard (2005). "The later Roman Empire". In Fouracre, Paul (ed.). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume 1, c.500–c.700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 25–26. ISBN 978-1-13905393-8.
  46. ^ Craddock, Luminous Historian, p. 60; also see Shelby Thomas McCloy, Gibbon's Antagonism to Christianity (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1933). Gibbon, however, began chapter XV with what appeared to be a moderately positive appraisal of the Church's rise to power and authority. Therein he documented one primary and five secondary causes of the rapid spread of Christianity throughout the Roman Empire: primarily, "the convincing evidence of the doctrine itself, and... the ruling providence of its great Author;" secondarily, "exclusive zeal, the immediate expectation of another world, the claim of miracles, the practice of rigid virtue, and the constitution of the primitive church." (first quote, Gibbon in Craddock, Luminous Historian, p. 61; second quote, Gibbon in Womersley, Decline and Fall, vol. 1, ch. XV, p. 497.)
  47. ^ Henry Edwards Davis, An Examination of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Chapters of Mr. Gibbon's History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (London: J. Dodsley, 1778). online.
  48. ^ See Gibbon monographs.
  49. ^ Womersley, ed., Decline and Fall, vol. 1, ch. XVI, p. 516. see online Gibbon's first footnote here reveals even more about why his detractors reacted so harshly: In Cyrene, [the Jews] massacred 220,000 Greeks; in Cyprus, 240,000; in Egypt, a very great multitude. Many of these unhappy victims were sawed asunder, according to a precedent to which David had given the sanction of his examples. The victorious Jews devoured the flesh, licked up the blood, and twisted the entrails like a girdle around their bodies. see Dion Cassius l. lxviii, p. 1145. As a matter of fact, this is a verbatim citation from Dio Cassius, Historia Romana LXVIII, 32:1–3: The Jewish Uprising: Meanwhile, the Jews in the region of Cyrene had put one Andreas at their head and were destroying both the Romans and the Greeks. They would cook their flesh, make belts for themselves of their entrails, anoint themselves with their blood, and wear their skins for clothing. Many they sawed in two, from the head downwards. Others they would give to wild beasts and force still others to fight as gladiators. In all, consequently, two hundred and twenty thousand perished. In Egypt, also, they performed many similar deeds, and in Cyprus under the leadership of Artemio. There, likewise, two hundred and forty thousand perished. For this reason no Jew may set foot in that land, but even if one of them is driven upon the island by force of the wind, he is put to death. Various persons took part in subduing these Jews, one being Lusius, who was sent by Trajan.
  50. ^ Womersley, Decline and Fall, vol. 3, ch. LXXI, p. 1068.
  51. ^ Burke supported the American rebellion, while Gibbon sided with the ministry; but with regard to the French Revolution they shared a perfect revulsion. Despite their agreement on the FR, Burke and Gibbon "were not specially close," owing to Whig party differences and divergent religious beliefs, not to mention Burke's sponsorship of the Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782 which abolished, and therefore cost Gibbon his place on, the government's Board of Trade and Plantations in 1782. see Pocock, "The Ironist," ¶: "Both the autobiography...."
  52. ^ Winston Churchill, My Early Life: A Roving Commission (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1958), p. 111.
  53. ^ Roland Quinault, "Winston Churchill and Gibbon," in Edward Gibbon and Empire, eds. R. McKitterick and R. Quinault (Cambridge: 1997), 317–332, at p. 331; Pocock, "Ironist," ¶: "Both the autobiography...."
  54. ^ Womersley, Decline and Fall, vol. 2, Preface to Gibbon vol. 4, p. 520.
  55. ^ Stephen, DNB, p. 1134.
  56. ^ Groat, Brian. "Asimov on How to Be Prolific". Medium.com, 25 October 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2018
  57. ^ London: Chapman and Hall, 1950. Chapter 6, p. 122.

Sources

  • Beer, G. R. de. "The Malady of Edward Gibbon, F.R.S." Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 7:1 (December 1949), 71–80.
  • Craddock, Patricia B. Edward Gibbon, Luminous Historian 1772–1794. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989. HB: ISBN 0-8018-3720-0. Biography.
  • Dickinson, H. T. "The Politics of Edward Gibbon". Literature and History 8:4 (1978), 175–196.
  • Goodall, John (2008), Portchester Castle, London: English Heritage, ISBN 978-1-84802-007-8
  • Low, D. M., Edward Gibbon. 1737–1794 (London: Chatto & Windus, 1937).
  • Murray, John (ed.), The Autobiographies of Edward Gibbon. Second Edition (London: John Murray, 1897).
  • Norton, J. E. A Bibliography of the Works of Edward Gibbon. New York: Burt Franklin Co., 1940, repr. 1970.
  • Norton, J .E. The Letters of Edward Gibbon. 3 vols. London: Cassell & Co. Ltd., 1956.
  • Pocock, J. G. A. The Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon, 1737–1764. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. HB: ISBN 0-521-63345-1.
  • Pocock, J. G. A. "Classical and Civil History: The Transformation of Humanism". Cromohs 1 (1996). Online at the . Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  • Pocock, J. G. A. "The Ironist". Review of David Womersley's The Watchmen of the Holy City. London Review of Books 24:22 (14 November 2002). Online at the London Review of Books (subscribers only). Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  • Gibbon, Edward. Memoirs of My Life and Writings. Online at Gutenberg. Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  • Stephen, Sir Leslie, "Gibbon, Edward (1737–1794)". In the Dictionary of National Biography, eds. Sir Leslie Stephen and Sir Sidney Lee. Oxford: 1921, repr. 1963. Vol. 7, 1129–1135.
  • Womersley, David, ed. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. 3 vols. (London and New York: Penguin, 1994).
  • Womersley, David. "Introduction," in Womersley, Decline and Fall, vol. 1, xi–cvi.
  • Womersley, David. "Gibbon, Edward (1737–1794)". In the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, eds. H.C.G. Matthew and Brian Harrison. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. Vol. 22, 8–18.

Further reading

Before 1985

  • Barlow, J. W. (1879). “Gibbon and Julian”. In: Hermathena, Volume 3, 142–159. Dublin: Edward Posonby.
  • Beer, Gavin de. Gibbon and His World. London: Thames and Hudson, 1968. HB: ISBN 0-670-28981-7.
  • Bowersock, G. W., et al. eds. Edward Gibbon and the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1977.
  • Craddock, Patricia B. Young Edward Gibbon: Gentleman of Letters. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982. HB: ISBN 0-8018-2714-0. Biography.
  • Jordan, David. Gibbon and his Roman Empire. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1971.
  • Keynes, Geoffrey, ed. The Library of Edward Gibbon. 2nd ed. Godalming, England: St. Paul's Bibliographies, 1940, repr. 1980.
  • Lewis, Bernard. "Gibbon on Muhammad". Daedalus 105:3 (Summer 1976), 89–101.
  • Low, D. M. Edward Gibbon 1737–1794. London: Chatto and Windus, 1937. Biography.
  • Momigliano, Arnaldo. "Gibbon's Contributions to Historical Method". Historia 2 (1954), 450–463. Reprinted in Momigliano, Studies in Historiography (New York: Harper & Row, 1966; Garland Pubs., 1985), 40–55. PB: ISBN 0-8240-6372-4.
  • Porter, Roger J. "Gibbon's Autobiography: Filling Up the Silent Vacancy". Eighteenth-Century Studies 8:1 (Autumn 1974), 1–26.
  • Stephen, Leslie, "Gibbon's Autobiography" in Studies of a Biographer, Vol. 1 (1898)
  • Swain, J. W. Edward Gibbon the Historian. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1966.
  • Turnbull, Paul (1982). "The Supposed Infidelity of Edward Gibbon". Historical Journal. 5: 23–41. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00009845. S2CID 159801709.
  • White, Jr. Lynn, ed. The Transformation of the Roman World: Gibbon's Problem after Two Centuries. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1966. HB: ISBN 0-520-01334-4.

Since 1985

  • Berghahn, C.-F., and T. Kinzel, eds., Edward Gibbon im deutschen Sprachraum. Bausteine einer Rezeptionsgeschichte. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter, 2015.
  • Bowersock, G. W. Gibbon's Historical Imagination. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1988.
  • Burrow, J. W. Gibbon (Past Masters). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985. HB: ISBN 0-19-287553-1. PB: ISBN 0-19-287552-3.
  • Carnochan, W. Bliss. Gibbon's Solitude: The Inward World of the Historian. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1987. HB: ISBN 0-8047-1363-4.
  • Chaney, Edward, "Reiseerlebnis und 'Traumdeutung' bei Edward Gibbon und William Beckford", Europareisen politisch-sozialer Eliten im 18.Jahrhundert, eds. J. Rees, W. Siebers and H. Tilgner (Berlin 2002), pp. 243–60.
  • Chaney, Edward, "Gibbon, Beckford and the Interpretation of Dreams, Waking Thoughts, and Incidents", The Beckford Society Annual Lectures 2000-2003, ed. Jon Millinton (Beckford Society, 2004).
  • Craddock, Patricia B. Edward Gibbon: a Reference Guide. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1987. PB: ISBN 0-8161-8217-5. A comprehensive listing of secondary literature through 1985. See also covering the period through 1997.
  • Ghosh, Peter R. "Gibbon Observed". Journal of Roman Studies 81 (1991), 132–156.
  • Ghosh, Peter R. "Gibbon's First Thoughts: Rome, Christianity and the Essai sur l'Étude de la Litterature 1758–61". Journal of Roman Studies 85 (1995), 148–164.
  • Ghosh, Peter R. "The Conception of Gibbon's History", in McKitterick and Quinault, eds. Edward Gibbon and Empire, 271–316.
  • Ghosh, Peter R. "Gibbon's Timeless Verity: Nature and Neo-Classicism in the Late Enlightenment," in Womersley, Burrow, Pocock, eds. Edward Gibbon: bicentenary essays.
  • Ghosh, Peter R. "Gibbon, Edward 1737–1794 British historian of Rome and universal historian," in Kelly Boyd, ed. Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 1999), 461–463.
  • Kapossy, Béla, Lovis, Béatrice (dir.), Edward Gibbon et Lausanne. Le Pays de Vaud à la rencontre des Lumières européennes. Gollion: Infolio, 2022, 528 p.
  • Levine, Joseph M., "Edward Gibbon and the Quarrel between the Ancients and the Moderns," in Levine, Humanism and History: origins of modern English historiography (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1987).
  • Levine, Joseph M. "Truth and Method in Gibbon's Historiography," in Levine, The Autonomy of History: truth and method from Erasmus to Gibbon (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1999).
  • McKitterick, R., and R. Quinault, eds. Edward Gibbon and Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
  • Norman, Brian. "The Influence of Switzerland on the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon," in Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century [SVEC] v.2002:03. Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 2002.
  • O'Brien, Karen. "English Enlightenment Histories, 1750–c.1815" in José Rabasa, ed. (2012). The Oxford History of Historical Writing: Volume 3: 1400–1800. OUP Oxford. pp. 518–35. ISBN 978-0199219179..
  • Pocock, J. G. A. Barbarism and Religion, 4 vols.: vol. 1, The Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon, 1737–1764, 1999 [hb: ISBN 0-521-63345-1]; vol. 2, Narratives of Civil Government, 1999 [hb: ISBN 0-521-64002-4]; vol. 3, The First Decline and Fall, 2003 [pb: ISBN 0-521-82445-1]; vol. 4, Barbarians, Savages and Empires, 2005 [pb: ISBN 0-521-72101-6]. all Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Porter, Roy. Gibbon: Making History. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989, HB: ISBN 0-312-02728-1.
  • Turnbull, Paul. "'Une marionnette infidele': the Fashioning of Edward Gibbon's Reputation as the English Voltaire," in Womersley, Burrow, Pocock, eds. Edward Gibbon: bicentenary essays.
  • Womersley, David P. The Transformation of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. HB: ISBN 0-521-35036-0.
  • Womersley, David P., John Burrow, and J. G. A. Pocock, eds. Edward Gibbon: bicentenary essays. Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 1997. HB: ISBN 0-7294-0552-4.
  • Womersley, David P. Gibbon and the ‘Watchmen of the Holy City’: The Historian and His Reputation, 1776–1815. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. PB: ISBN 0-19-818733-5.

External links

  • Works by Edward Gibbon in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Edward Gibbon at Project Gutenberg
  • Gibbon, by James Cotter Morison at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Edward Gibbon at Internet Archive
  • Works by Edward Gibbon at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Edward Gibbon, Historian of the Roman Empire. Part 1: The Man and his Book
  • Edward Gibbon, Historian of the Roman Empire. Part 2: A closer look at The Decline and Fall
  • DeclineandFallResources.com – Original Maps and Footnote Translations

edward, gibbon, english, 1707, died, 1770, english, composer, 1568, 1650, 1737, january, 1794, english, essayist, historian, politician, most, important, work, history, decline, fall, roman, empire, published, volumes, between, 1776, 1788, known, quality, iron. For the English MP 1707 70 see Edward Gibbon died 1770 For the English composer 1568 1650 see Edward Gibbons Edward Gibbon FRS ˈ ɡ ɪ b en 8 May 1737 1 16 January 1794 was an English essayist historian and politician His most important work The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire published in six volumes between 1776 and 1788 is known for the quality and irony of its prose its use of primary sources and its polemical criticism of organised religion 2 Edward GibbonFRSPortrait by Joshua ReynoldsMember of Parliament for LymingtonIn office 1781 1784Preceded bySamuel SaltEdward EliotSucceeded bySamuel SaltWilbraham TollemacheMember of Parliament for LiskeardIn office 1774 1780Preceded byHarry BurrardThomas DummerSucceeded byHarry BurrardWilliam ManningPersonal detailsBorn8 May 1737Putney Surrey EnglandDied16 January 1794 1794 01 16 aged 56 London EnglandPolitical partyWhigAlma materMagdalen College OxfordOccupationEssayist historian politicianSignature Contents 1 Early life 1737 1752 2 Career 2 1 Oxford Lausanne and a religious journey 1752 1758 2 2 Thwarted romance 2 3 First fame and the Grand tour 1758 1765 2 4 Late career 1765 1776 2 4 1 Work 2 4 2 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 1776 1788 3 Later life 1789 1794 4 Legacy 4 1 Influence 5 Monographs by Gibbon 6 Other writings by Gibbon 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 Further reading 10 1 Before 1985 10 2 Since 1985 11 External linksEarly life 1737 1752 EditEdward Gibbon was born in 1737 the son of Edward and Judith Gibbon at Lime Grove in the town of Putney Surrey He had six siblings five brothers and one sister all of whom died in infancy His grandfather also named Edward had lost his assets as a result of the South Sea bubble stock market collapse in 1720 but eventually regained much of his wealth Gibbon s father was thus able to inherit a substantial estate 3 His paternal grandmother Catherine Acton was granddaughter of Sir Walter Acton 2nd Baronet 4 As a youth Gibbon s health was under constant threat He described himself as a puny child neglected by my Mother starved by my nurse At age nine he was sent to Dr Woddeson s school at Kingston upon Thames now Kingston Grammar School shortly after which his mother died He then took up residence in the Westminster School boarding house owned by his adored Aunt Kitty Catherine Porten Soon after she died in 1786 he remembered her as rescuing him from his mother s disdain and imparting the first rudiments of knowledge the first exercise of reason and a taste for books which is still the pleasure and glory of my life 5 From 1747 Gibbon spent time at the family home in Buriton 6 By 1751 Gibbon s reading was already extensive and certainly pointed toward his future pursuits Laurence Echard s Roman History 1713 William Howel l s An Institution of General History 1680 85 and several of the 65 volumes of the acclaimed Universal History from the Earliest Account of Time 1747 1768 7 Career EditOxford Lausanne and a religious journey 1752 1758 Edit Magdalen College Oxford Following a stay at Bath in 1752 to improve his health at the age of 15 Gibbon was sent by his father to Magdalen College Oxford where he was enrolled as a gentleman commoner He was ill suited however to the college atmosphere and later rued his 14 months there as the most idle and unprofitable of his life Because he himself says so in his autobiography it used to be thought that his penchant for theological controversy his aunt s influence fully bloomed when he came under the spell of the deist or rationalist theologian Conyers Middleton 1683 1750 the author of Free Inquiry into the Miraculous Powers 1749 In that tract Middleton denied the validity of such powers Gibbon promptly objected or so the argument used to run The product of that disagreement with some assistance from the work of Catholic Bishop Jacques Benigne Bossuet 1627 1704 and that of the Elizabethan Jesuit Robert Parsons 1546 1610 yielded the most memorable event of his time at Oxford his conversion to Roman Catholicism on 8 June 1753 He was further corrupted by the free thinking deism of the playwright poet couple David and Lucy Mallet 8 and finally Gibbon s father already in despair had had enough David Womersley has shown however that Gibbon s claim to having been converted by a reading of Middleton is very unlikely and was introduced only into the final draft of the Memoirs in 1792 93 9 Bowersock suggests that Gibbon fabricated the Middleton story retrospectively in his anxiety about the impact of the French Revolution and Edmund Burke s claim that it was provoked by the French philosophes so influential on Gibbon Within weeks of his conversion the adolescent was removed from Oxford and sent to live under the care and tutelage of Daniel Pavillard Reformed pastor of Lausanne Switzerland There he made one of his life s two great friendships that of Jacques Georges Deyverdun the French language translator of Goethe s The Sorrows of Young Werther and that of John Baker Holroyd later Lord Sheffield Just a year and a half later after his father threatened to disinherit him on Christmas Day 1754 he reconverted to Protestantism The various articles of the Romish creed he wrote disappeared like a dream 10 He remained in Lausanne for five intellectually productive years a period that greatly enriched Gibbon s already immense aptitude for scholarship and erudition he read Latin literature travelled throughout Switzerland studying its cantons constitutions and studied the works of Hugo Grotius Samuel von Pufendorf John Locke Pierre Bayle and Blaise Pascal Thwarted romance Edit Suzanne Curchod He also met the one romance in his life the daughter of the pastor of Crassy a young woman named Suzanne Curchod who was later to become the wife of Louis XVI s finance minister Jacques Necker and the mother of Madame de Stael The two developed a warm affinity Gibbon proceeded to propose marriage 11 but ultimately this was out of the question blocked both by his father s staunch disapproval and Curchod s equally staunch reluctance to leave Switzerland Gibbon returned to England in August 1758 to face his father No refusal of the elder s wishes could be allowed Gibbon put it this way I sighed as a lover I obeyed as a son 12 He proceeded to cut off all contact with Curchod even as she vowed to wait for him Their final emotional break apparently came at Ferney France in early 1764 though they did see each other at least one more time a year later 13 First fame and the Grand tour 1758 1765 Edit Portchester Castle came under Gibbon s command for a brief period while he was an officer in the South Hampshire Militia 14 Upon his return to England Gibbon published his first book Essai sur l Etude de la Litterature in 1761 which produced an initial taste of celebrity and distinguished him in Paris at least as a man of letters 15 From 1759 to 1770 Gibbon served on active duty and in reserve with the South Hampshire Militia his deactivation in December 1762 coinciding with the militia s dispersal at the end of the Seven Years War 16 The following year he returned via Paris to Lausanne where he made the acquaintance of a prudent worthy young man William Guise On 18 April 1764 he and Guise set off for Italy crossed the Alps and after spending the summer in Florence arrived in Rome via Lucca Pisa Livorno and Siena in early October 17 In his autobiography Gibbon vividly records his rapture when he finally neared the great object of my pilgrimage at the distance of twenty five years I can neither forget nor express the strong emotions which agitated my mind as I first approached and entered the eternal City After a sleepless night I trod with a lofty step the ruins of the Forum each memorable spot where Romulus stood or Tully spoke or Caesar fell was at once present to my eye and several days of intoxication were lost or enjoyed before I could descend to a cool and minute investigation 18 Here Gibbon first conceived the idea of composing a history of the city later extended to the entire empire a moment he described later as his Capitoline vision 19 It was at Rome on the fifteenth of October 1764 as I sat musing amidst the ruins of the Capitol while the barefooted fryars were singing vespers in the temple of Jupiter that the idea of writing the decline and fall of the City first started to my mind 20 Womersley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography p 12 notes the existence of good reasons to doubt the statement s accuracy Elaborating Pocock Classical History 2 refers to it as a likely creation of memory or a literary invention given that Gibbon in his autobiography claimed that his journal dated the reminiscence to 15 October when in fact the journal gives no date Late career 1765 1776 Edit Work Edit In June 1765 Gibbon returned to his father s house and remained there until the latter s death in 1770 21 These five years were considered by Gibbon as the worst of his life but he tried to remain busy by making early attempts towards writing full histories His first historical narrative known as the History of Switzerland which represented Gibbon s love for Switzerland was never published nor finished Even under the guidance of Deyverdun a German translator for Gibbons Gibbon became too critical of himself and completely abandoned the project only writing 60 pages of text 22 However after Gibbon s death his writings on Switzerland s history were discovered and published by Lord Sheffield in 1815 Soon after abandoning his History of Switzerland Gibbon made another attempt towards completing a full history His second work Memoires Litteraires de la Grande Bretagne was a two volume set which described the literary and social conditions of England at the time such as Lord Lyttelton s history of Henry II and Nathaniel Lardner s The Credibility of the Gospel History 23 Gibbon s Memoires Litteraires failed to gain any notoriety and was considered a flop by fellow historians and literary scholars 24 Blue plaque to Gibbon on Bentinck Street London After he tended to his father s estate which was by no means in good condition quite enough remained for Gibbon to settle fashionably in London at 7 Bentinck Street free of financial concern By February 1773 he was writing in earnest but not without the occasional self imposed distraction He took to London society quite easily joined the better social clubs including Dr Johnson s Literary Club and looked in from time to time on his friend Holroyd in Sussex He succeeded Oliver Goldsmith at the Royal Academy as professor in ancient history honorary but prestigious In late 1774 he was initiated as a Freemason of the Premier Grand Lodge of England 25 He was also perhaps least productively in that same year 1774 returned to the House of Commons for Liskeard Cornwall through the intervention of his relative and patron Edward Eliot 26 He became the archetypal back bencher benignly mute and indifferent his support of the Whig ministry invariably automatic Gibbon s indolence in that position perhaps fully intentional subtracted little from the progress of his writing Gibbon lost the Liskeard seat in 1780 when Eliot joined the opposition taking with him the Electors of Leskeard who are commonly of the same opinion as Mr El l iot Murray p 322 The following year owing to the good grace of Prime Minister Lord North he was again returned to Parliament this time for Lymington on a by election 27 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 1776 1788 Edit Main article The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire In a distant age and climate the tragic scene of the death of Hosein will awaken the sympathy of the coldest reader Edward Gibbon The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 28 After several rewrites with Gibbon often tempted to throw away the labours of seven years the first volume of what was to become his life s major achievement The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire was published on 17 February 1776 Through 1777 the reading public eagerly consumed three editions for which Gibbon was rewarded handsomely two thirds of the profits amounting to approximately 1 000 29 Biographer Leslie Stephen wrote that thereafter His fame was as rapid as it has been lasting And as regards this first volume Some warm praise from David Hume overpaid the labour of ten years Volumes II and III appeared on 1 March 1781 eventually rising to a level with the previous volume in general esteem Volume IV was finished in June 1784 30 the final two were completed during a second Lausanne sojourn September 1783 to August 1787 where Gibbon reunited with his friend Deyverdun in leisurely comfort By early 1787 he was straining for the goal and with great relief the project was finished in June Gibbon later wrote It was on the day or rather the night of 27 June 1787 between the hours of eleven and twelve that I wrote the last lines of the last page in a summer house in my garden I will not dissemble the first emotions of joy on the recovery of my freedom and perhaps the establishment of my fame But my pride was soon humbled and a sober melancholy was spread over my mind by the idea that I had taken my everlasting leave of an old and agreeable companion and that whatsoever might be the future fate of my history the life of the historian must be short and precarious 31 Volumes IV V and VI finally reached the press in May 1788 their publication having been delayed since March so it could coincide with a dinner party celebrating Gibbon s 51st birthday the 8th 32 Mounting a bandwagon of praise for the later volumes were such contemporary luminaries as Adam Smith William Robertson Adam Ferguson Lord Camden and Horace Walpole Adam Smith told Gibbon that by the universal assent of every man of taste and learning whom I either know or correspond with it sets you at the very head of the whole literary tribe at present existing in Europe 33 In November 1788 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society the main proposer being his good friend Lord Sheffield 34 In 1783 Gibbon had been intrigued by the cleverness of Sheffield s 12 year old eldest daughter Maria and he proposed to teach her himself Over the following years he continued creating a girl of sixteen who was both well educated confident and determined to choose her own husband Gibbon described her as a mixture of just observation and lively imagery the strong sense of a man expressed with the easy elegance of a female 35 Later life 1789 1794 Edit Gibbon s memorial tablet on the Sheffield Mausoleum in St Andrew amp St Mary The Virgin s church in Fletching East Sussex The years following Gibbon s completion of The History were filled largely with sorrow and increasing physical discomfort He had returned to London in late 1787 to oversee the publication process alongside Lord Sheffield With that accomplished in 1789 it was back to Lausanne only to learn of and be deeply affected by the death of Deyverdun who had willed Gibbon his home La Grotte He resided there with little commotion took in the local society received a visit from Sheffield in 1791 and shared the common abhorrence of the French Revolution In 1793 word came of Lady Sheffield s death Gibbon immediately left Lausanne and set sail to comfort a grieving but composed Sheffield His health began to fail critically in December and at the turn of the new year he was on his last legs 36 Among Edward Gibbon s maladies was gout 37 Gibbon is also believed to have suffered from an extreme case of scrotal swelling probably a hydrocele testis a condition which causes the scrotum to swell with fluid in a compartment overlying either testicle 38 In an age when close fitting clothes were fashionable his condition led to a chronic and disfiguring inflammation that left Gibbon a lonely figure 39 As his condition worsened he underwent numerous procedures to alleviate the condition but with no enduring success In early January the last of a series of three operations caused an unremitting peritonitis to set in and spread from which he died The English giant of the Enlightenment 40 finally succumbed at 12 45 pm 16 January 1794 at age 56 He was buried in the Sheffield Mausoleum attached to the north transept of the Church of St Mary and St Andrew Fletching East Sussex 41 having died in Fletching while staying with his great friend Lord Sheffield Gibbon s estate was valued at approximately 26 000 He left most of his property to cousins As stipulated in his will Sheffield oversaw the sale of his library at auction to William Beckford for 950 42 What happened next suggests that Beckford may have known of Gibbon s moralistic impertinent animadversion at his expense in the presence of the Duchess of Devonshire at Lausanne Gibbon s wish that his 6 000 book library would not be locked up under the key of a jealous master was effectively denied by Beckford who retained it in Lausanne until 1801 before inspecting it then locking it up again until at least as late as 1818 before giving most of the books back to Gibbon s physician Dr Scholl who had helped negotiate the sale in the first place Beckford s annotated copy of the Decline and Fall turned up in Christie s in 1953 complete with his critique of what he considered the author s ludicrous self complacency your frequent distortion of historical Truth to provoke a gibe or excite a sneer your ignorance of oriental languages etc 43 Legacy EditEdward Gibbon s central thesis in his explanation of how the Roman Empire fell that it was due to embracing Christianity is not widely accepted by scholars today Gibbon argued that with the empire s new Christian character large sums of wealth that would have otherwise been used in the secular affairs in promoting the state were transferred to promoting the activities of the Church However the pre Christian empire also spent large financial sums on religious affairs and it is unclear whether or not the change of religion increased the amount of resources the empire spent on religion Gibbon further argued that new attitudes in Christianity caused many Christians of wealth to renounce their lifestyles and enter a monastic lifestyle and so stop participating in the support of the empire However while many Christians of wealth did become monastics this paled in comparison to the participants in the imperial bureaucracy Although Gibbon further pointed out that the importance Christianity placed on peace caused a decline in the number of people serving the military the decline was so small as to be negligible for the army s effectiveness 44 45 Gibbon s work has been criticised for its scathing view of Christianity as laid down in chapters XV and XVI a situation which resulted in the banning of the book in several countries Gibbon s alleged crime was disrespecting and none too lightly the character of sacred Christian doctrine by treat ing the Christian church as a phenomenon of general history not a special case admitting supernatural explanations and disallowing criticism of its adherents More specifically the chapters excoriated the church for supplanting in an unnecessarily destructive way the great culture that preceded it and for the outrage of practising religious intolerance and warfare 46 Gibbon in letters to Holroyd and others expected some type of church inspired backlash but the harshness of the ensuing torrents exceeded anything he or his friends had anticipated Contemporary detractors such as Joseph Priestley and Richard Watson stoked the nascent fire but the most severe of these attacks was an acrimonious piece by the young cleric Henry Edwards Davis 47 Gibbon subsequently published his Vindication in 1779 in which he categorically denied Davis criminal accusations branding him a purveyor of servile plagiarism 48 Davis followed Gibbon s Vindication with yet another reply 1779 Gibbon s apparent antagonism to Christian doctrine spilled over into the Jewish faith leading to charges of anti Semitism For example he wrote From the reign of Nero to that of Antoninus Pius the Jews discovered a fierce impatience of the dominion of Rome which repeatedly broke out in the most furious massacres and insurrections Humanity is shocked at the recital of the horrid cruelties which they committed in the cities of Egypt of Cyprus and of Cyrene where they dwelt in treacherous friendship with the unsuspecting natives and we are tempted to applaud the severe retaliation which was exercised by the arms of legions against a race of fanatics whose dire and credulous superstition seemed to render them the implacable enemies not only of the Roman government but also of mankind 49 Influence Edit Portrait of Edward Gibbon by Henry Walton Gibbon is considered to be a son of the Enlightenment and this is reflected in his famous verdict on the history of the Middle Ages I have described the triumph of barbarism and religion 50 However politically he aligned himself with the conservative Edmund Burke s rejection of the radical egalitarian movements of the time as well as with Burke s dismissal of overly rationalistic applications of the rights of man 51 Gibbon s work has been praised for its style his piquant epigrams and its effective irony Winston Churchill memorably noted in My Early Life I set out upon Gibbon s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire and was immediately dominated both by the story and the style I devoured Gibbon I rode triumphantly through it from end to end and enjoyed it all 52 Churchill modelled much of his own literary style on Gibbon s Like Gibbon he dedicated himself to producing a vivid historical narrative ranging widely over period and place and enriched by analysis and reflection 53 Unusually for the 18th century Gibbon was never content with secondhand accounts when the primary sources were accessible though most of these were drawn from well known printed editions I have always endeavoured he says to draw from the fountain head that my curiosity as well as a sense of duty has always urged me to study the originals and that if they have sometimes eluded my search I have carefully marked the secondary evidence on whose faith a passage or a fact were reduced to depend 54 In this insistence upon the importance of primary sources Gibbon is considered by many to be one of the first modern historians In accuracy thoroughness lucidity and comprehensive grasp of a vast subject the History is unsurpassable It is the one English history which may be regarded as definitive Whatever its shortcomings the book is artistically imposing as well as historically unimpeachable as a vast panorama of a great period 55 The subject of Gibbon s writing as well as his ideas and style have influenced other writers Besides his influence on Churchill Gibbon was also a model for Isaac Asimov in his writing of The Foundation Trilogy which he said involved a little bit of cribbin from the works of Edward Gibbon 56 Evelyn Waugh admired Gibbon s style but not his secular viewpoint In Waugh s 1950 novel Helena the early Christian author Lactantius worried about the possibility of a false historian with the mind of Cicero or Tacitus and the soul of an animal and he nodded towards the gibbon who fretted his golden chain and chattered for fruit 57 Monographs by Gibbon EditEssai sur l Etude de la Litterature London Becket amp De Hondt 1761 Critical Observations on the Sixth Book of Vergil s The Aeneid London Elmsley 1770 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire vol I 1776 vols II III 1781 vols IV V VI 1788 1789 all London Strahan amp Cadell A Vindication of some passages in the fifteenth and sixteenth chapters of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire London J Dodsley 1779 Memoire Justificatif pour servir de Reponse a l Expose etc de la Cour de France London Harrison amp Brooke 1779 Other writings by Gibbon Edit Lettre sur le gouvernement de Berne Letter No IX Mr Gibbon to on the Government of Berne in Miscellaneous Works First 1796 edition vol 1 below Scholars differ on the date of its composition Norman D M Low 1758 59 Pocock 1763 64 Memoires Litteraires de la Grande Bretagne co author Georges Deyverdun 2 vols vol 1 London Becket amp De Hondt 1767 vol 2 London Heydinger 1768 Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon Esq ed John Lord Sheffield 2 vols London Cadell amp Davies 1796 5 vols London J Murray 1814 3 vols London J Murray 1815 Includes Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon Esq Autobiographies of Edward Gibbon ed John Murray London J Murray 1896 EG s complete memoirs six drafts from the original manuscripts The Private Letters of Edward Gibbon 2 vols ed Rowland E Prothero London J Murray 1896 The works of Edward Gibbon Volume 3 1906 Gibbon s Journal to 28 January 1763 ed D M Low London Chatto and Windus 1929 Le Journal de Gibbon a Lausanne ed Georges A Bonnard Lausanne Librairie de l Universite 1945 Miscellanea Gibboniana eds G R de Beer L Junod G A Bonnard Lausanne Librairie de l Universite 1952 The Letters of Edward Gibbon 3 vols ed J E Norton London Cassell amp Co 1956 vol 1 1750 1773 vol 2 1774 1784 vol 3 1784 1794 cited as Norton Letters Gibbon s Journey from Geneva to Rome ed G A Bonnard London Thomas Nelson and Sons 1961 journal Edward Gibbon Memoirs of My Life ed G A Bonnard New York Funk amp Wagnalls 1969 1966 portions of EG s memoirs arranged chronologically omitting repetition The English Essays of Edward Gibbon ed Patricia Craddock Oxford Clarendon Press 1972 hb ISBN 0 19 812496 1 See also EditThe Work of J G A Pocock Edward Gibbon section The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Further reading The Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon A Gibbon chronology Historiography of the United KingdomNotes EditMost of this article including quotations unless otherwise noted has been adapted from Stephen s entry on Edward Gibbon in the Dictionary of National Biography 36 References Edit O S 27 April Gibbon s birthday is 27 April 1737 of the old style O S Julian calendar England adopted the new style N S Gregorian calendar in 1752 and thereafter Gibbon s birthday was celebrated on 8 May 1737 N S The most recent and also the first critical edition in three volumes is that of David Womersley For commentary on Gibbon s irony and insistence on primary sources whenever available see Womersley Introduction While the larger part of Gibbon s caustic view of Christianity is declared within the text of chapters XV and XVI Gibbon rarely neglects to note its baleful influence throughout the remaining volumes of the Decline and Fall D M Low Edward Gibbon 1737 1794 London Chatto amp Windus 1937 p 7 Burke s Peerage Baronetage and Knightage 106th edition vol 1 ed Charles Mosley Burke s Peerage Ltd 1999 p 28 Norton Letters vol 3 10 5 17 86 45 48 Local Luminaries Stephen DNB p 1130 Pocock Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon 29 40 At age 14 Gibbon was a prodigy of uncontrolled reading Gibbon himself admitted an indiscriminate appetite p 29 Pocock Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon for Middleton see pp 45 47 for Bossuet p 47 for the Mallets p 23 Robert Parsons or Persons A Christian directory The first booke of the Christian exercise appertaining to resolution London 1582 In his 1796 edition of Gibbon s Memoirs Lord Sheffield claims that Gibbon directly connected his Catholic conversion to his reading of Parsons Womersley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography p 9 Womersley Gibbon and the Watchmen of the Holy City The Historian and His Reputation 1776 1815 Oxford University Press 2002 as cited by G M Bowersock in The New York Review of Books 25 November 2010 p 56 John Murray ed The Autobiographies of Edward Gibbon London John Murray 1896 p 137 Norton Biblio p 2 Letters vol 1 p 396 a concise summary of their relationship is found at 396 401 Murray p 239 The phrase sighed etc alludes to the play Polyeucte by the father of French tragedy Pierre Corneille Womersley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography p 11 Womersley 11 12 Goodall 2008 p 38 In the Essai the 24 year old boldly braved the reigning philosoph e ic fashion to uphold the studious values and practices of the erudits antiquarian scholars Womersley p 11 and The Miscellaneous Works First edition vol 2 Womersley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography pp 11 12 Gibbon was commissioned a captain and resigned a lieutenant colonel later crediting his service with providing him a larger introduction into the English world There was further the matter of a vast utility The discipline and evolutions of a modern battalion gave me a clearer notion of the phalanx and the legion and the captain of the Hampshire grenadiers the reader may smile has not been useless to the historian of the Roman empire Murray p 190 Edward Chaney Reiseerlebnis und Traumdeutung bei Edward Gibbon und William Beckford Europareisen politisch sozialer Eliten im 18 Jahrhundert eds J Rees W Siebers and H Tilgner Berlin 2002 pp 244 45 cf Chaney Gibbon Beckford and the Interpretation of Dreams pp 40 41 Chaney p 40 and Murray pp 266 267 Pocock Classical History 2 Murray p 302 Cecil Algernon Six Oxford thinkers Edward Gibbon John Henry Newman R W Church James Anthony Froude Walter Pater Lord Morley of Blackburn London John Murray 1909 p 59 Cecil Algernon Six Oxford thinkers Edward Gibbon John Henry Newman R W Church James Anthony Froude Walter Pater Lord Morley of Blackburn London John Murray 1909 p 60 Cecil Algernon Six Oxford thinkers Edward Gibbon John Henry Newman R W Church James Anthony Froude Walter Pater Lord Morley of Blackburn London John Murray 1909 p 61 Morley John May 1878 English Men of Letters Macmillan and Co pp 61 62 Retrieved 3 May 2020 i e in London s Lodge of Friendship No 3 see Gibbon s freemasonry Gibbon Edward 1737 94 of Bentinck St London Buriton Hants and Lenborough Bucks History of Parliament Online Retrieved 10 May 2016 Gibbon s Whiggery was solidly conservative in favour of the propertied oligarchy while upholding the subject s rights under the rule of law though staunchly against ideas such as the natural rights of man and popular sovereignty what he referred to as the wild amp mischievous system of Democracy Dickinson Politics 178 179 Gibbon also served on the government s Board of Trade and Plantations from 1779 until 1782 when the Board was abolished The subsequent promise of an embassy position in Paris ultimately aborted serendipitously leaving Gibbon free to focus on his great project Gibbon Edward 1911 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Volume 5 London pp 391 392 Norton Biblio pp 37 45 Gibbon sold the copyrights to the remaining editions of volume 1 and the remaining 5 volumes to publishers Strahan amp Cadell for 8000 The great History earned the author a total of about 9000 Norton Biblio pp 49 57 Both Norton and Womersley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography p 14 establish that vol IV was substantially complete by the end of 1783 Murray pp 333 334 Norton Biblio p 61 The Autobiography and Correspondence of Edward Gibbon the Historian Alex Murray 1869 p 345 Fellow Details Royal Society Retrieved 10 May 2016 Stern Marvin 2004 Stanley nee Holroyd Lady Maria Josepha 1771 1863 letter writer and liberal advocate Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 74489 Retrieved 4 January 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Original text Stephen Leslie 1890 Gibbon Edward In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 21 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 250 256 Roy Porter and G S Rousseau 1998 Gout The Patrician Malady The New York Times Jellinek E H 1999 Varnish the business for the ladies Edward Gibbon s decline and fall J R Soc Med 92 7 374 79 doi 10 1177 014107689909200716 PMC 1297297 PMID 10615283 After more than two centuries the exact nature of Gibbon s ailment remains a bone of contention Patricia Craddock in a very full and graphic account of Gibbon s last days notes that Sir Gavin de Beer s medical analysis of 1949 makes it certain that Gibbon did not have a true hydrocele and highly probable that he was suffering both from a large and irreducible hernia and cirrhosis of the liver Also worthy of note are Gibbon s congenial and even joking moods while in excruciating pain as he neared the end Both authors report this late bit of Gibbonian bawdiness Why is a fat man like a Cornish Borough Because he never sees his member see Womersley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography p 16 Craddock Luminous Historian 334 342 and Beer Malady so styled by the unrivalled master of Enlightenment studies historian Franco Venturi 1914 1994 in his Utopia and Reform in the Enlightenment Cambridge 1971 p 132 See Pocock Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon p 6 x Sheffield Mausoleum Mausolea amp Monuments Trust www mmtrust org uk Womersley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 17 18 Edward Chaney Gibbon Beckford and the Interpretation of Dreams Waking Thoughts and Incidents The Beckford Society Annual Lectures 2000 2003 Beckford Society 2004 pp 45 47 Heather Peter The fall of the Roman Empire Oxford University Press 2005 122 123 Gerberding Richard 2005 The later Roman Empire In Fouracre Paul ed The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 1 c 500 c 700 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 25 26 ISBN 978 1 13905393 8 Craddock Luminous Historian p 60 also see Shelby Thomas McCloy Gibbon s Antagonism to Christianity Chapel Hill Univ of North Carolina Press 1933 Gibbon however began chapter XV with what appeared to be a moderately positive appraisal of the Church s rise to power and authority Therein he documented one primary and five secondary causes of the rapid spread of Christianity throughout the Roman Empire primarily the convincing evidence of the doctrine itself and the ruling providence of its great Author secondarily exclusive zeal the immediate expectation of another world the claim of miracles the practice of rigid virtue and the constitution of the primitive church first quote Gibbon in Craddock Luminous Historian p 61 second quote Gibbon in Womersley Decline and Fall vol 1 ch XV p 497 Henry Edwards Davis An Examination of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Chapters of Mr Gibbon s History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire London J Dodsley 1778 online See Gibbon monographs Womersley ed Decline and Fall vol 1 ch XVI p 516 see online Gibbon s first footnote here reveals even more about why his detractors reacted so harshly In Cyrene the Jews massacred 220 000 Greeks in Cyprus 240 000 in Egypt a very great multitude Many of these unhappy victims were sawed asunder according to a precedent to which David had given the sanction of his examples The victorious Jews devoured the flesh licked up the blood and twisted the entrails like a girdle around their bodies see Dion Cassius l lxviii p 1145 As a matter of fact this is a verbatim citation from Dio Cassius Historia Romana LXVIII 32 1 3 The Jewish Uprising Meanwhile the Jews in the region of Cyrene had put one Andreas at their head and were destroying both the Romans and the Greeks They would cook their flesh make belts for themselves of their entrails anoint themselves with their blood and wear their skins for clothing Many they sawed in two from the head downwards Others they would give to wild beasts and force still others to fight as gladiators In all consequently two hundred and twenty thousand perished In Egypt also they performed many similar deeds and in Cyprus under the leadership of Artemio There likewise two hundred and forty thousand perished For this reason no Jew may set foot in that land but even if one of them is driven upon the island by force of the wind he is put to death Various persons took part in subduing these Jews one being Lusius who was sent by Trajan Womersley Decline and Fall vol 3 ch LXXI p 1068 Burke supported the American rebellion while Gibbon sided with the ministry but with regard to the French Revolution they shared a perfect revulsion Despite their agreement on the FR Burke and Gibbon were not specially close owing to Whig party differences and divergent religious beliefs not to mention Burke s sponsorship of the Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782 which abolished and therefore cost Gibbon his place on the government s Board of Trade and Plantations in 1782 see Pocock The Ironist Both the autobiography Winston Churchill My Early Life A Roving Commission New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1958 p 111 Roland Quinault Winston Churchill and Gibbon in Edward Gibbon and Empire eds R McKitterick and R Quinault Cambridge 1997 317 332 at p 331 Pocock Ironist Both the autobiography Womersley Decline and Fall vol 2 Preface to Gibbon vol 4 p 520 Stephen DNB p 1134 Groat Brian Asimov on How to Be Prolific Medium com 25 October 2016 Retrieved 30 April 2018 London Chapman and Hall 1950 Chapter 6 p 122 Sources Edit Beer G R de The Malady of Edward Gibbon F R S Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 7 1 December 1949 71 80 Craddock Patricia B Edward Gibbon Luminous Historian 1772 1794 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1989 HB ISBN 0 8018 3720 0 Biography Dickinson H T The Politics of Edward Gibbon Literature and History 8 4 1978 175 196 Goodall John 2008 Portchester Castle London English Heritage ISBN 978 1 84802 007 8 Low D M Edward Gibbon 1737 1794 London Chatto amp Windus 1937 Murray John ed The Autobiographies of Edward Gibbon Second Edition London John Murray 1897 Norton J E A Bibliography of the Works of Edward Gibbon New York Burt Franklin Co 1940 repr 1970 Norton J E The Letters of Edward Gibbon 3 vols London Cassell amp Co Ltd 1956 Pocock J G A The Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon 1737 1764 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1999 HB ISBN 0 521 63345 1 Pocock J G A Classical and Civil History The Transformation of Humanism Cromohs 1 1996 Online at the Universita degli Studi di Firenze Retrieved 20 November 2009 Pocock J G A The Ironist Review of David Womersley s The Watchmen of the Holy City London Review of Books 24 22 14 November 2002 Online at the London Review of Books subscribers only Retrieved 20 November 2009 Gibbon Edward Memoirs of My Life and Writings Online at Gutenberg Retrieved 20 November 2009 Stephen Sir Leslie Gibbon Edward 1737 1794 In the Dictionary of National Biography eds Sir Leslie Stephen and Sir Sidney Lee Oxford 1921 repr 1963 Vol 7 1129 1135 Womersley David ed The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 3 vols London and New York Penguin 1994 Womersley David Introduction in Womersley Decline and Fall vol 1 xi cvi Womersley David Gibbon Edward 1737 1794 In the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography eds H C G Matthew and Brian Harrison Oxford Oxford University Press 2004 Vol 22 8 18 Further reading EditBefore 1985 Edit Barlow J W 1879 Gibbon and Julian In Hermathena Volume 3 142 159 Dublin Edward Posonby Beer Gavin de Gibbon and His World London Thames and Hudson 1968 HB ISBN 0 670 28981 7 Bowersock G W et al eds Edward Gibbon and the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1977 Craddock Patricia B Young Edward Gibbon Gentleman of Letters Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press 1982 HB ISBN 0 8018 2714 0 Biography Jordan David Gibbon and his Roman Empire Urbana IL University of Illinois Press 1971 Keynes Geoffrey ed The Library of Edward Gibbon 2nd ed Godalming England St Paul s Bibliographies 1940 repr 1980 Lewis Bernard Gibbon on Muhammad Daedalus 105 3 Summer 1976 89 101 Low D M Edward Gibbon 1737 1794 London Chatto and Windus 1937 Biography Momigliano Arnaldo Gibbon s Contributions to Historical Method Historia 2 1954 450 463 Reprinted in Momigliano Studies in Historiography New York Harper amp Row 1966 Garland Pubs 1985 40 55 PB ISBN 0 8240 6372 4 Porter Roger J Gibbon s Autobiography Filling Up the Silent Vacancy Eighteenth Century Studies 8 1 Autumn 1974 1 26 Stephen Leslie Gibbon s Autobiography in Studies of a Biographer Vol 1 1898 Swain J W Edward Gibbon the Historian New York St Martin s Press 1966 Turnbull Paul 1982 The Supposed Infidelity of Edward Gibbon Historical Journal 5 23 41 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00009845 S2CID 159801709 White Jr Lynn ed The Transformation of the Roman World Gibbon s Problem after Two Centuries Berkeley University of California Press 1966 HB ISBN 0 520 01334 4 Since 1985 Edit Berghahn C F and T Kinzel eds Edward Gibbon im deutschen Sprachraum Bausteine einer Rezeptionsgeschichte Heidelberg Universitatsverlag Winter 2015 Bowersock G W Gibbon s Historical Imagination Stanford Stanford University Press 1988 Burrow J W Gibbon Past Masters Oxford Oxford University Press 1985 HB ISBN 0 19 287553 1 PB ISBN 0 19 287552 3 Carnochan W Bliss Gibbon s Solitude The Inward World of the Historian Stanford Stanford University Press 1987 HB ISBN 0 8047 1363 4 Chaney Edward Reiseerlebnis und Traumdeutung bei Edward Gibbon und William Beckford Europareisen politisch sozialer Eliten im 18 Jahrhundert eds J Rees W Siebers and H Tilgner Berlin 2002 pp 243 60 Chaney Edward Gibbon Beckford and the Interpretation of Dreams Waking Thoughts and Incidents The Beckford Society Annual Lectures 2000 2003 ed Jon Millinton Beckford Society 2004 Craddock Patricia B Edward Gibbon a Reference Guide Boston G K Hall 1987 PB ISBN 0 8161 8217 5 A comprehensive listing of secondary literature through 1985 See also her supplement covering the period through 1997 Ghosh Peter R Gibbon Observed Journal of Roman Studies 81 1991 132 156 Ghosh Peter R Gibbon s First Thoughts Rome Christianity and the Essai sur l Etude de la Litterature 1758 61 Journal of Roman Studies 85 1995 148 164 Ghosh Peter R The Conception of Gibbon s History in McKitterick and Quinault eds Edward Gibbon and Empire 271 316 Ghosh Peter R Gibbon s Timeless Verity Nature and Neo Classicism in the Late Enlightenment in Womersley Burrow Pocock eds Edward Gibbon bicentenary essays Ghosh Peter R Gibbon Edward 1737 1794 British historian of Rome and universal historian in Kelly Boyd ed Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1999 461 463 Kapossy Bela Lovis Beatrice dir Edward Gibbon et Lausanne Le Pays de Vaud a la rencontre des Lumieres europeennes Gollion Infolio 2022 528 p Levine Joseph M Edward Gibbon and the Quarrel between the Ancients and the Moderns in Levine Humanism and History origins of modern English historiography Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 1987 Levine Joseph M Truth and Method in Gibbon s Historiography in Levine The Autonomy of History truth and method from Erasmus to Gibbon Chicago Chicago University Press 1999 McKitterick R and R Quinault eds Edward Gibbon and Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1997 Norman Brian The Influence of Switzerland on the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon in Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century SVEC v 2002 03 Oxford Voltaire Foundation 2002 O Brien Karen English Enlightenment Histories 1750 c 1815 in Jose Rabasa ed 2012 The Oxford History of Historical Writing Volume 3 1400 1800 OUP Oxford pp 518 35 ISBN 978 0199219179 Pocock J G A Barbarism and Religion 4 vols vol 1 The Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon 1737 1764 1999 hb ISBN 0 521 63345 1 vol 2 Narratives of Civil Government 1999 hb ISBN 0 521 64002 4 vol 3 The First Decline and Fall 2003 pb ISBN 0 521 82445 1 vol 4 Barbarians Savages and Empires 2005 pb ISBN 0 521 72101 6 all Cambridge Univ Press Porter Roy Gibbon Making History New York St Martin s Press 1989 HB ISBN 0 312 02728 1 Turnbull Paul Une marionnette infidele the Fashioning of Edward Gibbon s Reputation as the English Voltaire in Womersley Burrow Pocock eds Edward Gibbon bicentenary essays Womersley David P The Transformation of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1988 HB ISBN 0 521 35036 0 Womersley David P John Burrow and J G A Pocock eds Edward Gibbon bicentenary essays Oxford Voltaire Foundation 1997 HB ISBN 0 7294 0552 4 Womersley David P Gibbon and the Watchmen of the Holy City The Historian and His Reputation 1776 1815 Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 PB ISBN 0 19 818733 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edward Gibbon Wikiquote has quotations related to Edward Gibbon Wikisource has original works by or about Edward Gibbon Works by Edward Gibbon in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Edward Gibbon at Project Gutenberg Gibbon by James Cotter Morison at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Edward Gibbon at Internet Archive Works by Edward Gibbon at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Edward Gibbon Historian of the Roman Empire Part 1 The Man and his Book Edward Gibbon Historian of the Roman Empire Part 2 A closer look at The Decline and Fall Archive link DeclineandFallResources com Original Maps and Footnote Translations Biographer Patricia Craddock s comprehensive bibliography through May 1999 Craddock s supplement to her Reference Guide Parliament of Great BritainPreceded bySamuel SaltEdward Eliot Member of Parliament for Liskeard1774 1780 With Samuel Salt Succeeded bySamuel SaltWilbraham TollemachePreceded byHarry BurrardThomas Dummer Member of Parliament for Lymington1781 1784 With Harry Burrard Succeeded byHarry BurrardWilliam Manning Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward Gibbon amp oldid 1152669525, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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