fbpx
Wikipedia

John Mills (encyclopedist)

John Mills (c. 1717 – c. 1794) was an English writer on agriculture, translator and editor.[1] Mills and Gottfried Sellius are known for being the first to prepare a French edition of Ephraim Chambers's Cyclopaedia for publication in 1745,[2] which eventually resulted in the Encyclopédie published in France between 1751 and 1772.

As writer on agriculture, Mills is credited for publishing the earliest complete treatise on all branches of agriculture.[3] His chief work, A New System of Practical Husbandry, in 5 volumes, appeared in 1767. It combines the results of the experience and observations of such writers as Evelyn, Duhamel, John Worlidge, and Jethro Tull, and was highly commended. Mills was a warm advocate of small farms.[4]

Biography edit

John Mills was a person of considerable eminence in the 18th century, though little definite is known because no record exists of his life.[3][5] From his manner of expression, it is possible he may have lived his early life in foreign countries a long time,[6] possibly in France, but he was not born there.[2] In 1741 he was staying in London, where he had made preparations to go to Jamaica. He cancelled those plans because, as he wrote "having met with something more advantageous which engages me to stay in England"[7] Mills married a French woman, and they had two children; one baptised in Paris on 27 April 1742 and another born in May 1743.[2]

In 1743 Mills was in Paris for the purpose of bringing out, in concert with Gottfried Sellius, a German historian, a French edition of Ephraim Chambers's Cyclopaedia; but André le Breton, the printer commissioned by him to manage the undertaking, cheated him out of the subscription money, assaulted him, and ultimately obtained a license in his own name. This was the origin of the famous Encyclopédie. Mills, unable to obtain redress, returned to England.[4]

In 1755 Mills had started translation The History of the Roman Emperors, from Augustus to Constantine by Jean-Baptiste Louis Crévier from the French, and in 1763 Mills continued and completed the Memoirs of the Court of Augustus, by Thomas Blackwell the younger. In the 1760s he found his true vocation as a writer on agriculture, which started with his translation in 1762 of Duhamel du Monceau's Practical Treatise of Husbandry. In 1766 he published an Essay on the Management of Bees. The A New System of Practical Husbandry, (1767) treated all branches of agriculture, and contains the first mention of the potato as grown in fields. In 1770 appeared a translation from the Latin of G.A. Gyllenberg's Natural and Chemical Elements of Agriculture; in 1772 an Essay on the Weather (translated into Dutch in 1772), and Essays, Moral, Philosophical, and Political (anonymous, but advertised under his name); and in 1776 a Treatise on Cattle.[4]

On 13 February 1766[8] Mills was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society with Benjamin Franklin as one of his sponsors.[2] He was the first foreign associate of the French Agricultural Society, on whose list his name, with London as his residence, appears from 1767 to 1784.[4] He was also member of the Royal Societies of Agriculture of Rouen, the Mannheim Academy of Sciences,[2] and the Economical Society of Bern.[9]

Work edit

John Mills was credited for his comprehensive knowledge of agriculture, and of the cultivation and use of the ground.[3] He authored and translated several works in these fields. He became a well known author on the subject of husbandry in the 1760s, and was elected member of the Royal Society in 1766. He had come to prominence about twenty years earlier, while working on the translation of Chambers's Cyclopaedia.

Encyclopédie edit

 
Encyclopédie, Conditions for Subscriber, 1745/71.

Ephraim Chambers had first published his Cyclopaedia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences in two volumes in London in 1728, following several dictionaries of arts and sciences that had emerged in Europe since the late 17th century.[10][11] This work became quite renowned, and four editions were published between 1738 and 1742. An Italian translation of this work appeared from 1747 to 1754. In France a member of the banking family Lambert began translating Chambers into French,[12] but in 1745 John Mills and Gottfried Sellius were the first to actually prepare a French edition of Ephraim Chambers's Cyclopaedia for publication, which they entitled Encyclopédie.

Early in 1745 Mills and Sellius published a prospectus for the Encyclopédie[13] to attract subscribers to the project. This four-page prospectus was illustrated by Jean-Michel Papillon,[14] and accompanied by a plan (see image), stating that the work would be published in five volumes from June 1746 until the end of 1748.[15] The text was translated by Mills and Sellius, and it was corrected by an unnamed person, who appears to have been Denis Diderot.[16]

The prospectus was reviewed quite positively and cited at some length in several journals.[17] The Mémoires pour l'histoire des sciences et des beaux arts journal praised the project as "voici deux des plus fortes entreprises de Littérature qu'on ait faites depuis long-tems" (here are two of the greatest efforts undertaken in literature in a long time).[18] The Mercure Journal in June 1745 wrote a 25-pages article specifically praising Mill's role as translator; the Journal introduced Mills as an English scholar who had been raised in France and who spoke both French and English as a native. The Journal reports that Mills had discussed the work with several academics, was zealous about the project, had devoted his fortune to support this enterprise, and was the sole owner of the publishing privilege.[19]

However, the co-operation fell apart later in 1745. André le Breton, the publisher commissioned to manage the undertaking, cheated Mills out of the subscription money, claiming, for example, that Mills' knowledge of French was inadequate. In a confrontation, le Breton physically assaulted Mills. Mills took le Breton to court, but the court decided in le Breton's favour. Le Breton replaced Mills with Jean Paul de Gua de Malves, who in turn was later replaced by Denis Diderot. Soon after the court ruling, Mills left for England.[20][21]

The History of the Roman Emperors, from Augustus to Constantine, 1755 edit

 
The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine, 1755

Mills re-emerged from the shadow in 1755 as the translator of The History of the Roman Emperors, from Augustus to Constantine. This work was originally written in 10 volumes by Jean-Baptiste Louis Crévier, who was Professor of Rhetoric in the Collège de Beauvais in Paris. Mills had translated from the French the first two volumes, when in 1755 a review of this work was published in The monthly review of literary journal. The review introduced Mills as the translator, with the following phrase:

Mr. Mills, and his other works, we are alike strangers to; but have been informed he has published some tracts, with reputation, abroad; and that he was the first undertaker and promoter of the translation of Chambers's Cyclopædia into French...[6]

In Robert Watt's Bibliotheca Britannica (1824, p. 670) this translation was credited to another John Mills Esq.,[22] but this description clearly indicates we are dealing with one and the same person. The 1755 review was critical about Mill's translation skills, and stated:

...If he is an Englishman, which, but for his name, we should doubt, from his manner of expression, it is possible he may have lived so long in foreign countries, as to have somewhat lessened his acquaintance with his vernacular language: for we have met with few writers that have shewn themselves less masters of its purity, Mr. Johnson has judiciously observed, that "the great pest of speech is frequency of translation. No book was ever turned from one language to another, without imparting something of its native idiom; this is the most mischievous and comprehensive innovation; single words may enter by thousands, and 'the fabric of the tongue continue the fame; but new phraseology changes much at once, it alters not the single stones of the building, but the order of the columns."[6]

The review specifically expressed, that Mills left his diction in a Gallic form, that renders it uncouth to an English ear.[6] They hoped, that the remaining volumes would be more agreeable to the reader. It is unknown if Mills fulfilled this expectation, but he did translate another eight volumes, which were published in the next years.

A practical Treatise of Husbandry, 1759 edit

Mills first serious work in the field of agriculture, was the translation of Duhamel du Monceau's Practical Treatise of Husbandry, from the French. The full title of this translation is:

 
Treatise of Husbandry, 1759, Plate I
A practical Treatise of Husbandry: Wherein are contained many useful and valuable Experiments and Observations in the New Husbandry, collected during a Series of Years, by the celebrated, M. Duhamel Du Monceau, Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences dt Paris, Fellow of the Royal Society, London, &c. Also the most approved Practice of the best English Farmers, in the old Method of Husbandry. With Copper-Plates of several new and useful Instruments., 4tO. 16s. Whiston, &c.

Duhamel's work originally consisted of five volumes, which were published at different times. Mills didn't translation this work as a whole. He translated only such experiments as seemed to him most instructive in the then modern practice of farming, either according to the old or new method.[23] Mills explained in the preface, that "Duhamel and his correspondents have set the world an example which has long been wanted, and greatly desired by all who have the good of their country at heart, and are in the least sensible of the importance of Agriculture. They have given us a series of experiments in this most useful art, continued for several years together, with accuracy and judgment, and related in a clear, distinct, manner."[24]

According to Mills the work of Duhamel is noted for it empirical origin. Theory alone can avail but little in agriculture, Mills declared, referring to the following observation by Francis Home:

Agriculture does not take its rise originally from reason, but from fact and experience. It is a branch of natural philosophy, and can only be improved from a knowledge of facts, as they happen in nature. It is by attending to these facts that the other branches of natural philosophy have been so much advanced during these two last ages. Medicine has attained its present per section, only from the history of diseases and cafes delivered down. Chemistry is now reduced to a regular system, by the means of experiments made either by chance or design. But where are the experiments in Agriculture to answer this purpose ? When I look round for such, I can find few or none. There then lies the impediment in the way of Agriculture. Books in that art, we are not deficient in: but the book which we want, is a book of experiments.[25]

Only after reading the three first volumes of Experiments published by M. Duhamel, Francis Home declared: "They are distinct, exact, conclusive so far as they have gone, and stand a model for experiments in Agriculture. What a shame for Great Britain, where Agriculture is so much cultivated, to leave its exact value to be determined by foreigners!"[25]

Memoirs of the court of Augustus, 1763 edit

 
Memoirs of the Court of Augustus, Vol. 3, 1763

Another of Mills' projects was the continuation and completion of the third volume of Memoirs of the court of Augustus in 1763 from the original papers of Thomas Blackwell. Blackwell's works, including An Enquiry into the Life and Writings of Homer (1735), Letters Concerning Mythology (1748) and Memoirs of the Court of Augustus (3 vols., 1753–63), established him as one of the premier figures in the Scottish Enlightenment. Blackwell had published the first two volumes between 1753 and 1757, and the third volume was printed off to p. 144, when Blackwell died. An advertisement prefixed to this volume explained the continuation:

"The proprietor, unwilling to let the sets of those gentlemen who had purchased the former volumes remain incomplete, put all the papers left by the author, relative to this work, into the hands of the present editor, who begs leave to observe, that those papers being, in general, Little more than loose leaves, detached notes, memorandums, and, very often, only bare hints of things intended to be said, without any connection, reference to each other, or even paging, he hopes he may justly claim some indulgence from the public, wherever he has erred in his endeavours to give them the order and method which he imagines might have been Dr. Blackwell's, if that gentleman had lived to finish his work."[26]

Mills further stated Blackwell's loose papers were deficient, and he had to recourse to the Ancients. A review of this work by Tobias Smollett in The Critical Review: Or, Annals of Literature stated, that "it is impossible for us to ascertain the particular passages of this publication that belong to Mr. Mills; but we will venture to say, upon the whole, that this volume, both in point of composition and language, is not inferior to its two elder brothers."[27]

A new and complete system of practical husbandry, 1762–1765 edit

John Mills wrote A new and complete system of practical husbandry, in five volumes, which were published between 1762 and 1765. The full titles of this work was:

 
Title page of A new and complete system of practical husbandry by John Mills, 1767
A new and complete system of practical husbandry, containing all that experience has proved to be most useful in farming, either in the old or new method, with a comparative view of both, and whatever is beneficial to the husbandman, or conducive 'to the ornament and improvement of the country gentleman's estate;

The five volumes of a new and complete system of husbandry, by Mills, is the first publication on agriculture that presents all the branches of the art within the compass of one work. John Worlidge began the attempt, but failed in the comprehension that is required.[3]

  • The first volume of Mills treats "soils" in the different kinds, clays, sands, and loams; manures, animal and vegetable, and composts; of the improvement of moorlands, and boggy lands and all uncultivated lands; the culture of grain and pulse; the sowing and change of crops; the culture of wheat, and rye, oats, barley, maize, or Indian corn, millet, panic, rice, buckwheat; culture of pulse, viz., beans, peas, vetches, lentils, and lupines.
  • Volume II. contains the horse-hoeing husbandry of grain and pulse; the distempers of corn.
  • Volume III. treats the enemies of corn; preservation of grain, turnips, potatoes, cabbages, clover, sainfoin, lucerne, cytisus, burnet, natural grasses; enclosing, and the situation of farms and farm houses.
  • Volume IV. contains "Gardening, and the culture of hops and olive"."
  • Volume V. treats " The making and managing o fermented liquors," and concludes with hemp, flax, madder, woad, weld, or dyer's weed, and a long appendix to each volume.

Mills leads all the previous authors in the arrangement of his work, which undoubtedly carried away the palm of agricultural writing at the time of its appearance. He joins extensively with John Evelyn and Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau, and does ample justice to the system of cultivation proposed by Jethro Tull. Turnips and potatoes were in general use, and the Rotherham plough is figured in the work, as are also thirteen of the natural grasses.[3]

Potatoes are entered in this work for the first time as a vegetable in the field cultivation, being about 150 years after the use of the plant was known as an esculent root. Mills quotes the authority of Miller in proof of its value and extensive utility. This author conveys his meaning and intelligence in the true style of writing—cool and plausible, and with becoming diffidence on all scientific disquisitions. No dogmatism mars the placid tenor of his story.[3]

Mills was a great stickler for small farms, almost cottier allotments; he did not see that any single bodily labour can effect but very little unless in combination, and that extensive projects employ most labour, and produce the largest results. A thick mist long clouded the human vision on that and similar points, and is not yet dispelled.[3]

Other works edit

The full titles of his other works Mills authored were:

  • "A treatise on cattle, showing the most approved methods of breeding, rearing, and fitting for use horses, asses, mules, horned cattle, sheep, goats, and swine, with directions for the proper treatment of them in their several diseases. To which is added a dissertation on their contagious diseases, carefully collected from the best authorities, and interspersed with remarks."
  • "An essay on the management of bees; wherein is shown the method of rearing these useful insects, and that the practice of saving their lives when their honey and wax are taken from them was known to the ancients, and is in itself simple and easily executed;"
  • "An essay on the weather, with remarks on the shepherd of Banbury's rules forjudging of its changes, and directions for preserving lives and buildings from the fatal effects of lightning;"

The treatise on cattle is an octavo volume of 491 pages, and treats horses, asses, mules, horned cattle, sheep, goats, and swine, with the cures of their disorders, which have a dissertation on their nature. The matter is more descriptive than that of Bradley, but not so practical in the application, though much merit is attached to the knowledge it shows of the origin and progress of the different animals.[3]

Mills also translated "Duhamel's husbandry;" in 1759, "Natural and chemical elements of agriculture, from the Latin of Gustavus Adolphus Gyllenborg;" in 1770, and he was the reputed author of some essays, moral, philosophical, and political.

Legacy edit

In the field of agricultural science John Mills was a proponent of a new movement named "horse-hoeing husbandry" or "new husbandry". This was based on the work of Jethro Tull, and supported by Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau in France, Michel Lullin de Chateauvieux in Switzerland, Mills in England. Mills translated their work, and introduced it in England, wherein for example Arthur Young learned about the work of Louis François Henri de Menon.[28] In return Mills's main work A New and Complete System of Practical Husbandry was translated into German,[29] and had its influence in the main land.

The British The Complete Farmer: Or, a General Dictionary of Husbandry 3rd ed. (1777). The Complete Farmer, listed John Mills in the subtitle of this work among the foremost authorities in the field of Husbandry of his time. Other people mentioned in this context were Carl Linnaeus, Louis François Henri de Menon, Hugh Plat, John Evelyn, John Worlidge, John Mortimer, Jethro Tull, William Ellis, Philip Miller, Thomas Hale, Edward Lisle, Roque, and Arthur Young.[30]

In the 19th century Donaldson (1854) in his Agricultural Biography, credited Mills' Practical Husbandry for being the "first publication on agriculture that presents all the branches of the art within the compass of one work. 'Worlidge began the attempt, but failed in the comprehension required."[31] However, by then most of the work of the proponents of "horse-hoeing husbandry" had become obsolete, due to the rapid progress of agriculture in those days.[32] Specifically Mills' Practical Husbandry was used as reference until the 1820s.[33] Other of his works have also been credited until in our days. For example The Management of Bees, was called "one of the bee books which are worth reading over and over again."[34] And the An Essay in the Weather Mills is considered unmatched for a long time "despite two centuries of philosophical work."[35]

Selected publications edit

  • Thomas Blackwell, John Mills (historical writer.) Memoirs of the court of Augustus. Continued and completed by John Mills. A. Millar. 1753–63
  • Jean-Baptiste Louis Crévier. The History of the Roman Emperors, from Augustus to Constantine, by Mr. Crevier, professor of rhetoric in the college of Beauvais. Translated from the French by John Mills. (10 volumes) 1755; Vol 1; Vol. 9
  • Duhamel du Monceau. A Practical Treatise of Husbandry. J. Whiston and B. White, London 1759. Translated from the French by John Mills.
  • John Mills. A New and Complete System of Practical Husbandry. London 1762–1765 (5 volumes): volume 1; Volume 2 Volume 3; Volume 4; Volume 5 ; German translation Volume 5, 1769
  • John Mills. An Essay on the Management of Bees. London 1766
  • Gustavus Adolphus Gyllenborg. The Natural and Chemical Elements of Agriculture. Translated from the Latin by John Mills, 1770.
  • John Mills. An Essay on the Weather. London 1770; Dutch translation, Amsterdam, 1772.
  • John Mills. Essays moral, philosophical and political. S. Hooper, 1772
  • John Mills. A Treatise on Cattle. 1776

References edit

  1. ^ John Goldworth Alger (1836–1907) and Anne P. Baker. "Mills, John (c. 1717-1786x1796), writer on agriculture". in: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 1894/2004
  2. ^ a b c d e John Lough: The Encyclopédie. Slatkine 1971/1989, ISBN 9782051010467, p. 9 (restricted online copy, p. 9, at Google Books)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h John Donaldson. "John Mills, F.R.S.". in: Agricultural Biography, 1854, p. 51
  4. ^ a b c d Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Mills, John (d.1784?)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 37. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 460.
  5. ^ William White (1889) Notes and Queries. p. 456
  6. ^ a b c d Review of "The History of the Roman Emperors, from Augustus to Constantine" in: The monthly review of literary journal Vol XII. 1755. p. 405-412
  7. ^ Mills (1741), cited Dix-huitième siècle. Nr. 1-2, 1969. p. 274: And cited in John Lough (1971)
  8. ^ List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 – 2007 at royalsociety.org, 2008
  9. ^ John Mills. A New and Complete System of Practical Husbandry. London. Volume 1, 1766. Title page.
  10. ^ Lough (1971. p. 3-5)
  11. ^ Robert Shackleton "The Encyclopedie" in: Proceedings, American Philosophical Society (vol. 114, No. 5, 1970. p. 39)
  12. ^ Précis de la vie du citoyen Lambert, Bibliothèque nationale, Ln. 11217; Listed in Shackleton (1970, p. 130).
  13. ^ Recently rediscovered in the Bibliothèque nationale de France, see Prospectus pour une traduction française de la Cyclopaedia de Chambers blog.bnf.fr, Dec. 2010
  14. ^ André-François Le Breton, Jean-Michel Papillon, Ephraïm Chambers. Encyclopédie, ou Dictionnaire universel des arts et des sciences. 1745
  15. ^ Reproduction from 1745 original in: Luneau de Boisjermain (1771) Mémoire pour les libraires associés à l'Encyclopédie: contre le sieur Luneau de Boisjermain. p. 165.
  16. ^ Philipp Blom. Encyclopédie: the triumph of reason in an unreasonable age Fourth Estate, 2004. p. 37:
  17. ^ "Prospectus du Dictionnaire de Chambers, traduit en François, et proposé par souscription" in: M. Desfontaines. Jugemens sur quelques ouvrages nouveaux. Vol 8. (1745). p. 72
  18. ^ Review in: Mémoires pour l'histoire des sciences et des beaux arts, May 1745, Nr. 2. p. 934-8
  19. ^ Mercure Journal (1745, p. 87) cited in: Lough (1971), p. 20
  20. ^ Mills' summary of this matter was published in Boisjermain's Mémoire pour P. J. F. Luneau de Boisjermain av. d. Piéc. justif 1771, p. 162-3, where Boisjermain also gave his version of the events (p. 2-5).
  21. ^ Comments by Le Breton are published in his biography; in the preface of the encyclopedia; in John Lough (1971); etc.
  22. ^ Robert Watt (1824) Bibliotheca Britannica: Or a General Index to British and Foreign Literature. p. 670: See entries: MILLS, John, F.R.S. and MILLS, John, Esq.
  23. ^ Review of "A Practical Treatise of Husbandry." in: The Monthly Review, Or, Literary Journal, Volume 21 by Ralph Griffiths, G. E. Griffiths, 1759, p. 139-148 (online)
  24. ^ Mills in Preface of "A Practical Treatise of Husbandry," 1762.
  25. ^ a b Francis Home, The Principles of Agriculture and Vegetation, Edinburgh, 1757, pp. 3–5; Cited in the Preface of "A Practical Treatise of Husbandry," 1762.
  26. ^ Text cited in Tobias Smollett (1763, p. 289)
  27. ^ Tobias Smollett (1763) The Critical Review: Or, Annals of Literature. Vol. 15. p. 289
  28. ^ Travels in France during the years 1787, 1788 & 1789., 1790; 1892 edition, p. 138
  29. ^ Göttingische gelehrte Anzeigen. Vol. 2, (1764) p. 1048 ; Review of A New and Complete System os Practical Husbandry Vol 2. translated into German.
  30. ^ The Complete Farmer: Or, a General Dictionary of Husbandry. 3rd ed. 1777.
  31. ^ Samuel Austin Allibone. A Critical Dictionary of English Literature, and British and American Authors, Living and Deceased, from the Earliest Accounts to the Middle of the Nineteenth Century, Vol. 2, p. 1289.
  32. ^ John Claudius Loudon (1825) An Encyclopædia of Agriculture. Volume 1. p. iii: Preface
  33. ^ See for example: A.F.M. Willich et al. The domestic encyclopedia, 1821, p. 70; And Thomas Green Fessenden (1828) The New England Farmer. Vol. 6, p. 182.
  34. ^ British Bee Journal. Vol. 72 (1944) p. 177 mentioned
  35. ^ Vladimir Janković (2000) Reading the Skies: A Cultural History of English Weather..., p. 139

External links edit

  • The Encyclopédie – BBC Radio 4 broadcast (2010-10-26, 21:30)
  • by Ulrike Spindler at historicum.net, 2010

Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainLee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Mills, John (d.1784?)". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 37. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 460.

john, mills, encyclopedist, john, mills, 1717, 1794, english, writer, agriculture, translator, editor, mills, gottfried, sellius, known, being, first, prepare, french, edition, ephraim, chambers, cyclopaedia, publication, 1745, which, eventually, resulted, enc. John Mills c 1717 c 1794 was an English writer on agriculture translator and editor 1 Mills and Gottfried Sellius are known for being the first to prepare a French edition of Ephraim Chambers s Cyclopaedia for publication in 1745 2 which eventually resulted in the Encyclopedie published in France between 1751 and 1772 As writer on agriculture Mills is credited for publishing the earliest complete treatise on all branches of agriculture 3 His chief work A New System of Practical Husbandry in 5 volumes appeared in 1767 It combines the results of the experience and observations of such writers as Evelyn Duhamel John Worlidge and Jethro Tull and was highly commended Mills was a warm advocate of small farms 4 Contents 1 Biography 2 Work 2 1 Encyclopedie 2 2 The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine 1755 2 3 A practical Treatise of Husbandry 1759 2 4 Memoirs of the court of Augustus 1763 2 5 A new and complete system of practical husbandry 1762 1765 2 6 Other works 3 Legacy 4 Selected publications 5 References 6 External linksBiography editJohn Mills was a person of considerable eminence in the 18th century though little definite is known because no record exists of his life 3 5 From his manner of expression it is possible he may have lived his early life in foreign countries a long time 6 possibly in France but he was not born there 2 In 1741 he was staying in London where he had made preparations to go to Jamaica He cancelled those plans because as he wrote having met with something more advantageous which engages me to stay in England 7 Mills married a French woman and they had two children one baptised in Paris on 27 April 1742 and another born in May 1743 2 In 1743 Mills was in Paris for the purpose of bringing out in concert with Gottfried Sellius a German historian a French edition of Ephraim Chambers s Cyclopaedia but Andre le Breton the printer commissioned by him to manage the undertaking cheated him out of the subscription money assaulted him and ultimately obtained a license in his own name This was the origin of the famous Encyclopedie Mills unable to obtain redress returned to England 4 In 1755 Mills had started translation The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine by Jean Baptiste Louis Crevier from the French and in 1763 Mills continued and completed the Memoirs of the Court of Augustus by Thomas Blackwell the younger In the 1760s he found his true vocation as a writer on agriculture which started with his translation in 1762 of Duhamel du Monceau s Practical Treatise of Husbandry In 1766 he published an Essay on the Management of Bees The A New System of Practical Husbandry 1767 treated all branches of agriculture and contains the first mention of the potato as grown in fields In 1770 appeared a translation from the Latin of G A Gyllenberg s Natural and Chemical Elements of Agriculture in 1772 an Essay on the Weather translated into Dutch in 1772 and Essays Moral Philosophical and Political anonymous but advertised under his name and in 1776 a Treatise on Cattle 4 On 13 February 1766 8 Mills was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society with Benjamin Franklin as one of his sponsors 2 He was the first foreign associate of the French Agricultural Society on whose list his name with London as his residence appears from 1767 to 1784 4 He was also member of the Royal Societies of Agriculture of Rouen the Mannheim Academy of Sciences 2 and the Economical Society of Bern 9 Work editJohn Mills was credited for his comprehensive knowledge of agriculture and of the cultivation and use of the ground 3 He authored and translated several works in these fields He became a well known author on the subject of husbandry in the 1760s and was elected member of the Royal Society in 1766 He had come to prominence about twenty years earlier while working on the translation of Chambers s Cyclopaedia Encyclopedie edit nbsp Encyclopedie Conditions for Subscriber 1745 71 Ephraim Chambers had first published his Cyclopaedia or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences in two volumes in London in 1728 following several dictionaries of arts and sciences that had emerged in Europe since the late 17th century 10 11 This work became quite renowned and four editions were published between 1738 and 1742 An Italian translation of this work appeared from 1747 to 1754 In France a member of the banking family Lambert began translating Chambers into French 12 but in 1745 John Mills and Gottfried Sellius were the first to actually prepare a French edition of Ephraim Chambers s Cyclopaedia for publication which they entitled Encyclopedie Early in 1745 Mills and Sellius published a prospectus for the Encyclopedie 13 to attract subscribers to the project This four page prospectus was illustrated by Jean Michel Papillon 14 and accompanied by a plan see image stating that the work would be published in five volumes from June 1746 until the end of 1748 15 The text was translated by Mills and Sellius and it was corrected by an unnamed person who appears to have been Denis Diderot 16 The prospectus was reviewed quite positively and cited at some length in several journals 17 The Memoires pour l histoire des sciences et des beaux arts journal praised the project as voici deux des plus fortes entreprises de Litterature qu on ait faites depuis long tems here are two of the greatest efforts undertaken in literature in a long time 18 The Mercure Journal in June 1745 wrote a 25 pages article specifically praising Mill s role as translator the Journal introduced Mills as an English scholar who had been raised in France and who spoke both French and English as a native The Journal reports that Mills had discussed the work with several academics was zealous about the project had devoted his fortune to support this enterprise and was the sole owner of the publishing privilege 19 However the co operation fell apart later in 1745 Andre le Breton the publisher commissioned to manage the undertaking cheated Mills out of the subscription money claiming for example that Mills knowledge of French was inadequate In a confrontation le Breton physically assaulted Mills Mills took le Breton to court but the court decided in le Breton s favour Le Breton replaced Mills with Jean Paul de Gua de Malves who in turn was later replaced by Denis Diderot Soon after the court ruling Mills left for England 20 21 The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine 1755 edit nbsp The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine 1755 Mills re emerged from the shadow in 1755 as the translator of The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine This work was originally written in 10 volumes by Jean Baptiste Louis Crevier who was Professor of Rhetoric in the College de Beauvais in Paris Mills had translated from the French the first two volumes when in 1755 a review of this work was published in The monthly review of literary journal The review introduced Mills as the translator with the following phrase Mr Mills and his other works we are alike strangers to but have been informed he has published some tracts with reputation abroad and that he was the first undertaker and promoter of the translation of Chambers s Cyclopaedia into French 6 In Robert Watt s Bibliotheca Britannica 1824 p 670 this translation was credited to another John Mills Esq 22 but this description clearly indicates we are dealing with one and the same person The 1755 review was critical about Mill s translation skills and stated If he is an Englishman which but for his name we should doubt from his manner of expression it is possible he may have lived so long in foreign countries as to have somewhat lessened his acquaintance with his vernacular language for we have met with few writers that have shewn themselves less masters of its purity Mr Johnson has judiciously observed that the great pest of speech is frequency of translation No book was ever turned from one language to another without imparting something of its native idiom this is the most mischievous and comprehensive innovation single words may enter by thousands and the fabric of the tongue continue the fame but new phraseology changes much at once it alters not the single stones of the building but the order of the columns 6 The review specifically expressed that Mills left his diction in a Gallic form that renders it uncouth to an English ear 6 They hoped that the remaining volumes would be more agreeable to the reader It is unknown if Mills fulfilled this expectation but he did translate another eight volumes which were published in the next years A practical Treatise of Husbandry 1759 edit Mills first serious work in the field of agriculture was the translation of Duhamel du Monceau s Practical Treatise of Husbandry from the French The full title of this translation is nbsp Treatise of Husbandry 1759 Plate I A practical Treatise of Husbandry Wherein are contained many useful and valuable Experiments and Observations in the New Husbandry collected during a Series of Years by the celebrated M Duhamel Du Monceau Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences dt Paris Fellow of the Royal Society London amp c Also the most approved Practice of the best English Farmers in the old Method of Husbandry With Copper Plates of several new and useful Instruments 4tO 16s Whiston amp c Duhamel s work originally consisted of five volumes which were published at different times Mills didn t translation this work as a whole He translated only such experiments as seemed to him most instructive in the then modern practice of farming either according to the old or new method 23 Mills explained in the preface that Duhamel and his correspondents have set the world an example which has long been wanted and greatly desired by all who have the good of their country at heart and are in the least sensible of the importance of Agriculture They have given us a series of experiments in this most useful art continued for several years together with accuracy and judgment and related in a clear distinct manner 24 According to Mills the work of Duhamel is noted for it empirical origin Theory alone can avail but little in agriculture Mills declared referring to the following observation by Francis Home Agriculture does not take its rise originally from reason but from fact and experience It is a branch of natural philosophy and can only be improved from a knowledge of facts as they happen in nature It is by attending to these facts that the other branches of natural philosophy have been so much advanced during these two last ages Medicine has attained its present per section only from the history of diseases and cafes delivered down Chemistry is now reduced to a regular system by the means of experiments made either by chance or design But where are the experiments in Agriculture to answer this purpose When I look round for such I can find few or none There then lies the impediment in the way of Agriculture Books in that art we are not deficient in but the book which we want is a book of experiments 25 Only after reading the three first volumes of Experiments published by M Duhamel Francis Home declared They are distinct exact conclusive so far as they have gone and stand a model for experiments in Agriculture What a shame for Great Britain where Agriculture is so much cultivated to leave its exact value to be determined by foreigners 25 Illustrations of A practical Treatise of Husbandry 1759 nbsp Plate II nbsp Plate III nbsp Plate IV nbsp Plate V nbsp Plate VI Memoirs of the court of Augustus 1763 edit nbsp Memoirs of the Court of Augustus Vol 3 1763 Another of Mills projects was the continuation and completion of the third volume of Memoirs of the court of Augustus in 1763 from the original papers of Thomas Blackwell Blackwell s works including An Enquiry into the Life and Writings of Homer 1735 Letters Concerning Mythology 1748 and Memoirs of the Court of Augustus 3 vols 1753 63 established him as one of the premier figures in the Scottish Enlightenment Blackwell had published the first two volumes between 1753 and 1757 and the third volume was printed off to p 144 when Blackwell died An advertisement prefixed to this volume explained the continuation The proprietor unwilling to let the sets of those gentlemen who had purchased the former volumes remain incomplete put all the papers left by the author relative to this work into the hands of the present editor who begs leave to observe that those papers being in general Little more than loose leaves detached notes memorandums and very often only bare hints of things intended to be said without any connection reference to each other or even paging he hopes he may justly claim some indulgence from the public wherever he has erred in his endeavours to give them the order and method which he imagines might have been Dr Blackwell s if that gentleman had lived to finish his work 26 Mills further stated Blackwell s loose papers were deficient and he had to recourse to the Ancients A review of this work by Tobias Smollett in The Critical Review Or Annals of Literature stated that it is impossible for us to ascertain the particular passages of this publication that belong to Mr Mills but we will venture to say upon the whole that this volume both in point of composition and language is not inferior to its two elder brothers 27 A new and complete system of practical husbandry 1762 1765 edit John Mills wrote A new and complete system of practical husbandry in five volumes which were published between 1762 and 1765 The full titles of this work was nbsp Title page of A new and complete system of practical husbandry by John Mills 1767 A new and complete system of practical husbandry containing all that experience has proved to be most useful in farming either in the old or new method with a comparative view of both and whatever is beneficial to the husbandman or conducive to the ornament and improvement of the country gentleman s estate The five volumes of a new and complete system of husbandry by Mills is the first publication on agriculture that presents all the branches of the art within the compass of one work John Worlidge began the attempt but failed in the comprehension that is required 3 The first volume of Mills treats soils in the different kinds clays sands and loams manures animal and vegetable and composts of the improvement of moorlands and boggy lands and all uncultivated lands the culture of grain and pulse the sowing and change of crops the culture of wheat and rye oats barley maize or Indian corn millet panic rice buckwheat culture of pulse viz beans peas vetches lentils and lupines Volume II contains the horse hoeing husbandry of grain and pulse the distempers of corn Volume III treats the enemies of corn preservation of grain turnips potatoes cabbages clover sainfoin lucerne cytisus burnet natural grasses enclosing and the situation of farms and farm houses Volume IV contains Gardening and the culture of hops and olive Volume V treats The making and managing o fermented liquors and concludes with hemp flax madder woad weld or dyer s weed and a long appendix to each volume Mills leads all the previous authors in the arrangement of his work which undoubtedly carried away the palm of agricultural writing at the time of its appearance He joins extensively with John Evelyn and Henri Louis Duhamel du Monceau and does ample justice to the system of cultivation proposed by Jethro Tull Turnips and potatoes were in general use and the Rotherham plough is figured in the work as are also thirteen of the natural grasses 3 Potatoes are entered in this work for the first time as a vegetable in the field cultivation being about 150 years after the use of the plant was known as an esculent root Mills quotes the authority of Miller in proof of its value and extensive utility This author conveys his meaning and intelligence in the true style of writing cool and plausible and with becoming diffidence on all scientific disquisitions No dogmatism mars the placid tenor of his story 3 Mills was a great stickler for small farms almost cottier allotments he did not see that any single bodily labour can effect but very little unless in combination and that extensive projects employ most labour and produce the largest results A thick mist long clouded the human vision on that and similar points and is not yet dispelled 3 Other works edit The full titles of his other works Mills authored were A treatise on cattle showing the most approved methods of breeding rearing and fitting for use horses asses mules horned cattle sheep goats and swine with directions for the proper treatment of them in their several diseases To which is added a dissertation on their contagious diseases carefully collected from the best authorities and interspersed with remarks An essay on the management of bees wherein is shown the method of rearing these useful insects and that the practice of saving their lives when their honey and wax are taken from them was known to the ancients and is in itself simple and easily executed An essay on the weather with remarks on the shepherd of Banbury s rules forjudging of its changes and directions for preserving lives and buildings from the fatal effects of lightning The treatise on cattle is an octavo volume of 491 pages and treats horses asses mules horned cattle sheep goats and swine with the cures of their disorders which have a dissertation on their nature The matter is more descriptive than that of Bradley but not so practical in the application though much merit is attached to the knowledge it shows of the origin and progress of the different animals 3 Mills also translated Duhamel s husbandry in 1759 Natural and chemical elements of agriculture from the Latin of Gustavus Adolphus Gyllenborg in 1770 and he was the reputed author of some essays moral philosophical and political Legacy editIn the field of agricultural science John Mills was a proponent of a new movement named horse hoeing husbandry or new husbandry This was based on the work of Jethro Tull and supported by Henri Louis Duhamel du Monceau in France Michel Lullin de Chateauvieux in Switzerland Mills in England Mills translated their work and introduced it in England wherein for example Arthur Young learned about the work of Louis Francois Henri de Menon 28 In return Mills s main work A New and Complete System of Practical Husbandry was translated into German 29 and had its influence in the main land The British The Complete Farmer Or a General Dictionary of Husbandry 3rd ed 1777 The Complete Farmer listed John Mills in the subtitle of this work among the foremost authorities in the field of Husbandry of his time Other people mentioned in this context were Carl Linnaeus Louis Francois Henri de Menon Hugh Plat John Evelyn John Worlidge John Mortimer Jethro Tull William Ellis Philip Miller Thomas Hale Edward Lisle Roque and Arthur Young 30 In the 19th century Donaldson 1854 in his Agricultural Biography credited Mills Practical Husbandry for being the first publication on agriculture that presents all the branches of the art within the compass of one work Worlidge began the attempt but failed in the comprehension required 31 However by then most of the work of the proponents of horse hoeing husbandry had become obsolete due to the rapid progress of agriculture in those days 32 Specifically Mills Practical Husbandry was used as reference until the 1820s 33 Other of his works have also been credited until in our days For example The Management of Bees was called one of the bee books which are worth reading over and over again 34 And the An Essay in the Weather Mills is considered unmatched for a long time despite two centuries of philosophical work 35 Selected publications editThomas Blackwell John Mills historical writer Memoirs of the court of Augustus Continued and completed by John Mills A Millar 1753 63 Jean Baptiste Louis Crevier The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine by Mr Crevier professor of rhetoric in the college of Beauvais Translated from the French by John Mills 10 volumes 1755 Vol 1 Vol 9 Duhamel du Monceau A Practical Treatise of Husbandry J Whiston and B White London 1759 Translated from the French by John Mills John Mills A New and Complete System of Practical Husbandry London 1762 1765 5 volumes volume 1 Volume 2 Volume 3 Volume 4 Volume 5 German translation Volume 5 1769 John Mills An Essay on the Management of Bees London 1766 Gustavus Adolphus Gyllenborg The Natural and Chemical Elements of Agriculture Translated from the Latin by John Mills 1770 John Mills An Essay on the Weather London 1770 Dutch translation Amsterdam 1772 John Mills Essays moral philosophical and political S Hooper 1772 John Mills A Treatise on Cattle 1776References edit John Goldworth Alger 1836 1907 and Anne P Baker Mills John c 1717 1786x1796 writer on agriculture in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 1894 2004 a b c d e John Lough The Encyclopedie Slatkine 1971 1989 ISBN 9782051010467 p 9 restricted online copy p 9 at Google Books a b c d e f g h John Donaldson John Mills F R S in Agricultural Biography 1854 p 51 a b c d Lee Sidney ed 1894 Mills John d 1784 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 37 London Smith Elder amp Co p 460 William White 1889 Notes and Queries p 456 a b c d Review of The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine in The monthly review of literary journal Vol XII 1755 p 405 412 Mills 1741 cited Dix huitieme siecle Nr 1 2 1969 p 274 And cited in John Lough 1971 List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 2007 at royalsociety org 2008 John Mills A New and Complete System of Practical Husbandry London Volume 1 1766 Title page Lough 1971 p 3 5 Robert Shackleton The Encyclopedie in Proceedings American Philosophical Society vol 114 No 5 1970 p 39 Precis de la vie du citoyen Lambert Bibliotheque nationale Ln 11217 Listed in Shackleton 1970 p 130 Recently rediscovered in the Bibliotheque nationale de France see Prospectus pour une traduction francaise de la Cyclopaedia de Chambers blog bnf fr Dec 2010 Andre Francois Le Breton Jean Michel Papillon Ephraim Chambers Encyclopedie ou Dictionnaire universel des arts et des sciences 1745 Reproduction from 1745 original in Luneau de Boisjermain 1771 Memoire pour les libraires associes a l Encyclopedie contre le sieur Luneau de Boisjermain p 165 Philipp Blom Encyclopedie the triumph of reason in an unreasonable age Fourth Estate 2004 p 37 Prospectus du Dictionnaire de Chambers traduit en Francois et propose par souscription in M Desfontaines Jugemens sur quelques ouvrages nouveaux Vol 8 1745 p 72 Review in Memoires pour l histoire des sciences et des beaux arts May 1745 Nr 2 p 934 8 Mercure Journal 1745 p 87 cited in Lough 1971 p 20 Mills summary of this matter was published in Boisjermain s Memoire pour P J F Luneau de Boisjermain av d Piec justif 1771 p 162 3 where Boisjermain also gave his version of the events p 2 5 Comments by Le Breton are published in his biography in the preface of the encyclopedia in John Lough 1971 etc Robert Watt 1824 Bibliotheca Britannica Or a General Index to British and Foreign Literature p 670 See entries MILLS John F R S and MILLS John Esq Review of A Practical Treatise of Husbandry in The Monthly Review Or Literary Journal Volume 21 by Ralph Griffiths G E Griffiths 1759 p 139 148 online Mills in Preface of A Practical Treatise of Husbandry 1762 a b Francis Home The Principles of Agriculture and Vegetation Edinburgh 1757 pp 3 5 Cited in the Preface of A Practical Treatise of Husbandry 1762 Text cited in Tobias Smollett 1763 p 289 Tobias Smollett 1763 The Critical Review Or Annals of Literature Vol 15 p 289 Travels in France during the years 1787 1788 amp 1789 1790 1892 edition p 138 Gottingische gelehrte Anzeigen Vol 2 1764 p 1048 Review of A New and Complete System os Practical Husbandry Vol 2 translated into German The Complete Farmer Or a General Dictionary of Husbandry 3rd ed 1777 Samuel Austin Allibone A Critical Dictionary of English Literature and British and American Authors Living and Deceased from the Earliest Accounts to the Middle of the Nineteenth Century Vol 2 p 1289 John Claudius Loudon 1825 An Encyclopaedia of Agriculture Volume 1 p iii Preface See for example A F M Willich et al The domestic encyclopedia 1821 p 70 And Thomas Green Fessenden 1828 The New England Farmer Vol 6 p 182 British Bee Journal Vol 72 1944 p 177 mentioned Vladimir Jankovic 2000 Reading the Skies A Cultural History of English Weather p 139External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Mills agricultural writer The Encyclopedie BBC Radio 4 broadcast 2010 10 26 21 30 Die Encyclopedie von Diderot und d Alembert Am Anfang steht die Idee by Ulrike Spindler at historicum net 2010 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Lee Sidney ed 1894 Mills John d 1784 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 37 London Smith Elder amp Co p 460 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Mills encyclopedist amp oldid 1151158128, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.