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Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon

The English historian Edward Gibbon (1737–1794) is known primarily as the author of the magisterial The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (6 vols., 1776–1789). Both the imposing length of and awesome erudition displayed in that work have understandably overshadowed his other literary achievements, many of which deserve to be noted in their own valuable capacities.

First Edition, Volume I, 1796

Description edit

Shortly following Gibbon's death, his good friend and literary executor, John Lord Sheffield undertook to edit and in 1796 published the first (of three) edition(s) of the Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon (MW)[1] in order that the reading public have an opportunity to gain a broader insight into the historian and his overall body of work. Various elements of the MW, as well as other Gibbon writings not contained therein, are listed below along with their pertinent bibliographical detail and descriptive text where available. Notes and letters from Sheffield were also included in the MW, but only Gibbon's writings follow here. Listed contents are exactly those from each volume's table as they appear in the Google Books digitized copies. Links to those copies are provided below. Where publisher and year follows a work the reference is to the year of its first publication apart from the MW. A year following alone (with or without a scholar's name) refers to the year of Gibbon's composition.[2] An asterisk [*] denotes that the work can be found in Craddock, EEEG (see References).

The Miscellaneous Works edit

  • FIRST edition: 2 vols. quarto (London: A. Strahan, T. Cadell, Jr. & W. Davies, March 31, 1796[3]).
    • Volume I:
      • Memoirs of my Life and Writings. independently, and likely pirated[4] as, Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon, Esq., 2 vols. duodecimo (London: Hunt & Clarke, 1827).
        online: 1898 edition, O.F. Emerson, ed. incomplete portions of six "drafts" lettered A–F. Sheffield aggressively edited both the Memoirs and the MW in order to reflect Gibbon's anti-French Revolutionary sentiment while also downplaying his connection with Edmund Burke's eschatological interpretation; to prevent any further enlargement of Gibbon's reputation for harboring "irreligion" or atheism; and for other purposes of a more personal nature.[5] In 1966, Georges Bonnard published a composite collection chronologically arranged, "built on the same general lines" as Sheffield's, along with a thoroughly informative account of the historical background.[6] The drafts were not printed in their unedited entireties until 1896.[7]
      • Letters from Gibbon to Sheffield et al.;
      • Letters to and from Edward Gibbon. Letter No. IX is Gibbon's "Lettre sur le gouvernement de Berne." see SECOND edition, Vol. II below.
    • Volume II:
      • Abstract of the Books Mr. Gibbon read – with Reflections,
      • Extracts from his Journal,
      • A Collection of his Remarks, and detached Pieces, on different Subjects,
      • Outlines of the History of the World (1771 Craddock; 1784 Ghosh)*;
      • Essai sur l'Étude de la Littérature (à Londres: T. Becket & P.A. De Hondt, 1761; Paris: Chez Duchesne, 1762); first English translation (London: T. Becket & P.A. De Hondt, 1764). Gibbon's first published work, an invaluable introduction to the Decline and Fall, defends the érudits (antiquarian scholars) against French philosophes (especially D'Alembert in his Discours préliminaire à l'Encyclopédie [1751]) who had "contemptuously" assailed the érudits' work as inferior, parochial, and effete. Gibbon recoiled at the charges, and strove to reconcile the two groups by "proving...that all the faculties of the mind may be exercised and displayed by [the] study of ancient litterature [sic]." The Essai was reviewed with "cold indifference" in England,[8] but on the continent, it was met enthusiastically. In Paris, Gibbon was recognized as a man of letters. Sheffield opted not to provide an English translation because the Becket & De Hondt (1764) already existed.[9]
      • Critical Observations on the Design of the Sixth Book of [Virgil's] 'The Aenid' (London: P. Elmsley, 1770)*;
      • A Dissertation on the Subject of L'Homme au Masque de Fer (1774 in English)*;
      • Mémoir Justificatif Pour Servir de Réponse a l'Exposé, etc., de la Cour de France: First ed. (no place or printer, 1779); Second ed. (London: T. Harrison & S. Brooke, 1779);[10]
      • A Vindication of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Chapters of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (London: J. Dodsley, 1779)* online;
      • Antiquities of the House of Brunswick (London: J. Murray, 1814)* online;
      • An Address, &c. [recommending Mr. John Pinkerton [to publish] the 'Scriptores Rerum Anglicarum', our Latin Memorials of the Middle Ages] (1793)* as An Address &c. a well-conceived, persuasive plan to publish what Gibbon saw as a glaring deficiency in the English archives, i.e., the collected works of all English historians from 500 to 1500 A.D., including "the most ancient of our national writers" through the onset of David Hume's "true and perfect Æra of modern history." The deficiency grew all the more conspicuous when contrasted with similar projects already successfully carried out in Germany, Italy, France, and Denmark. The brief work strongly recommends Scot historian and poet John Pinkerton to head the project; an editor, Gibbon writes, "replete with a variety of knowledge," and "well qualified for this study, by a spirit of Criticism, acute discerning and suspicious."[11] For his part, Gibbon was prepared to contribute a general introduction and author-specific prefaces.

The first edition was "pirated" and reprinted twice in 1796, in Ireland and Switzerland:[12]

  • 3 vols. octavo (Dublin: P. Wogan, L. White et al.), adds only a "long note in French on Mme de Sévery" in vol. 1 at pp. 277–78. vol. 1: online. includes Memoirs of my Life and Writings; Appendix (Letters to and from Gibbon). vol. 2: online. Letters to and from Edward Gibbon, Esq.; Abstract of the Books Mr. Gibbon read – with Reflections; Extracts from his Journal. vol. 3: online. Extracts from Mr. Gibbon's Journal; A Collection of his Remarks, and detached pieces, on different Subjects; Outlines of the History of the World; Essai sur l'Étude de la Littérature; Critical Observations on the Sixth Book of The Aenid; Dissertation sur l'Homme au Masque de Fer; Mémoir Justificatif; A Vindication; Antiquities of the House of Brunswick; An Address &c.
  • 7 vols. octavo (Basel: J.J. Tourneisen). vols. 1–5 contain the London edition minus the French to English translations. vols. 6–7 incorporate the French to English translations, and a reprint of the 1764 English translation of the Essai sur l'Étude de la Littérature (not in the London edition).
  • SECOND edition: 5 vols. octavo (London: J. Murray, 1814[13][14]). proclaiming itself "a new edition with considerable additions," and grouped topically by Sheffield.
    • Volume I, Memoirs and Letters: online
      • Memoirs of my Life and Writings;
      • Letters to and from Edward Gibbon, Esq.;
      • Abstract of Mr. Gibbon's Will.
    • Volume II, Letters: online
      • Letters to and from Edward Gibbon, Esq.
      • Lettre sur le gouvernement de Berne (Norman: 1758–59; Pocock: 1764) ["Letter No. IX. Mr. Gibbon to *** on the Government of Berne." also appears with English translation in FIRST edition, Vol. 1, pp. 388–413]. a fictional letter from a Swedish diarist to a Swiss friend comparing the governments of Bern and early Rome. Employing language undeniably influenced by Montesquieu, Gibbon observes that Bern in adopting an oligarchic form similar to the Venetian, has omitted any incorporation of the separation of powers, in doing so has ignored the "principles of liberty," and therefore stands on the brink of despotism. Pocock identifies the Lettre as Gibbon's "first essay on empire in the context of European history." By this time, Gibbon has clearly adopted erudition as "the dominant interest of his young and his mature life."[15] Sheffield's preface intones, "The excellence of this curious paper will apologize for its great length." (31 octavo pages including translation).
    • Volume III, Historical and Critical: online
      • Outlines of the History of the World;
      • Mémoire sur la Monarchie de Mèdes (1768);
      • Les Principales Epoques de l'Histoire de la Grèce et de l'Egypte, suivant Sir Isaac Newton (1758);
      • Extrait de trois Mémoires de M. L'Abbé de la Bleterie sur la Succession de l'Empire Romain (1758);
      • Remarques Critiques sur le Nombre des Habitans dans la Cité des Sybarites;
      • Gouvernement Féodal, surtout en France (1768);
      • Relation des Noces de Charles Duc de Bourgogne (1768);
      • Critical Researches concerning the Title of Charles the Eighth to the Crown of Naples (1761);
      • An Account of a Letter addressed to Cocchi by chevalier L.G. Aretino (1764);
      • An Examination of [Paul Henri] Mallet's Introduction to the History of Denmark (1764);
      • Introduction à l'Histoire générale de la République des Suisses (1765–67); in Gibbon's own estimation, "a slight and superficial essay" not finished because of his uneasy comprehension of the gap between medieval Swiss and general European historiography.[16]
      • Remarques touchant les Doutes Historiques sur la Vie et le Règne du Roi Richard III. Par M. Horace Walpole. (1768);
      • Antiquities of the House of Brunswick (1790–1791 Craddock);
      • An Address recommending Mr. John Pinkerton [to publish] the "Scriptores Rerum Anglicarum," our Latin Memorials of the Middle Ages (1793)* as An Address &c. see same title above under FIRST edition, Volume II.
      • Appendix to an Address explanatory, &c. by Mr. Pinkerton.
    • Volume IV, Classical and Critical: online
      • Essai sur l'Étude de la Littérature;
      • On the Character of Brutus (1765–66 Craddock; 1769 Ghosh)* as Digression on the Character of Brutus;
      • On Mr. [Richard] Hurd's Commentary on Horace (1762)* as Hurd on Horace;
      • Nomina Gentesque Antiquae Italiae [aka Recueil sur la Géographie ancienne de l'Italie] (1763–64);
      • An Inquiry whether a Catalogue of the Armies sent into the Field is an essential part of an Epic Poem (1763);
      • An Examination of the Catalogue of Silius Italicus (1763);
      • A Minute Examination of Horace's Journey to Brundusium and of Cicero's Journey into Cilicia (1763);
      • On the Fasti of Ovid (1764);
      • On the Triumphs of the Romans (1764);
      • On the Triumphal Shows and Ceremonies (1764);
      • Remarques sur les Ouvrages et sur le Caractère de Salluste;
      • ——————— de Jules César;
      • ——————— de Cornelius Nepos;
      • ——————— de Tite Live (1756);
      • Remarques Critiques sur un Passage de Plaute (1757);
      • Remarques sur quelques Endroits de Virgile (1757);
      • Critical Observations on [the Design of] the Sixth Book of the Aeneid (1770);
      • Postscript to Ditto;
      • A Vindication of some Passages in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Chapters of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1779).
    • Volume V, Miscellaneous: online
      • Mémoir Justificatif Pour Servir de Réponse a l'Exposé, etc., de la Cour de France (1779);
      • Dissertation on the Allegorical Beings found on the reverses of Medals (1764);
      • Account of a MS. by the Abbé G.V. Gravina, del Governo Civile di Roma (1764);
      • Dissertation on the subject of l'Homme au Masque de Fer (1774);
      • Observations sur les Mémoires Posthumes de M. de Chéseaux (1756);
      • Remarques sur quelques Prodiges (1757);
      • Remarques Critiques sur les Dignités Sacerdotales de Jules César (1757);
      • Principes des Poids, des Monnoies, et des Mesures des Anciens (1759);
      • Dissertation sur les Anciennes Mesures &c. (1759 Sheffield; 1768 Ghosh);
      • On the Position of the Meridional Line, and the supposed Circumnavigation of Africa by the Ancients (1790 or 1791 Sheffield; 1789–90 Craddock)* as The Circumnavigation of Africa;
      • Selections from Mr. Gibbon's Extraits Raisonnés de mes Lectures, from the Journal, from the Receuil de mes Observations, et Pièces Détachées, Common-Place Books*, and Memoranda;
      • Remarks on Blackstone's Commentaries (1770)* as Abstract of 'Commentaries'..by Blackstone;
      • Index Expurgatorius (1768–69)*;
      • Observations on Augerii Gislenii Busbequii Omnia quae extent;
      • Notes and Additions to [Edward] Harewood's View of the various Editions of the Greek and Roman Classics (1793)* as Annotations in Har[]wood;
      • Appendix to the Treatise on the Position of the Meridional Line and the supposed Circumnavigation of Africa by the Ancients.
  • THIRD edition, 1 vol. quarto (London: J. Murray, April 4, 1815). contains all the new material from the second London edition printed in the first edition's quarto format in order to create a complete three-volume quarto set.

Other writings edit

  • General Observations on the Fall of the Roman Empire in the West (1772) online. first published at the end of volume III (1781) of the Decline and Fall
  • Notes on Modern Europe (1777)*
  • Codice Diplomatico (1790)*
  • Materials for a Seventh Volume (1790–91)*
  • Notes on the Antiquity of the English Universities (1789–91)*
  • Marginalia in Herodotus (1789)*
  • Habsburgica (1792–93)*

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ the full title of 1796 (and in square brackets, that of 1814) is, [The] Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon, Esquire; [Esq.] with Memoirs of his Life and Writings, composed by himself.[:] Illustrated from his Letters, with occasional notes and narrative, by [the Right Honourable] John, Lord Sheffield. in Two Volumes [a New Edition, with Considerable Additions in Five Volumes].
  2. ^ sources for this data are Sheffield's tables of contents; Norton, Biblio; Craddock, EEEG; and Ghosh, "Gibbon's Dark Ages."
  3. ^ precise days of publication in all cases from Norton, Biblio.
  4. ^ Norton, Biblio, p. 197.
  5. ^ Womersley, Watchmen, at 235–36, 240, and 346–49.
  6. ^ Bonnard, Memoirs, "Preface," vii-xxxiii, at xxxi. The manuscript originals are all contained, with one small exception, in the British Museum, Gibbon Papers, Add. MSS 34874 (p. xiii). As to why Gibbon exercised six attempts to recount his life on paper, Bonnard opines that he was repeatedly dissatisfied with subject order and length. But from draft to draft, where Gibbon met with self-approval, he "very often contented himself with simply copying what he had already written." (p. xxiv.)
  7. ^ Murray, Autobiographies.
  8. ^ Gibbon, Memoirs, ¶"The design of my first work;"  ¶"Two years elapsed in silence."
  9. ^ Womersley, ODNB, p. 11; Norton, Biblio, p. 3. additional background in: Peter Ghosh, "Gibbon's First Thoughts: Rome, Christianity and the Essai sur l'Étude de la Littérature 1758–61," Journal of Roman Studies 85(1995), 148–64; Pocock, EEG, chapter 9, "The 'Essai sur l'Étude de la Littérature': imagination, irony and history," 208–39; Brian Norman, chapter 4 in "The Influence of Switzerland on the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century [SVEC] v.2002:03, (Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 2002), 44–61.
  10. ^ Harrison seems certain to have also printed the first edition for "official purposes and not for general circulation." Norton, Biblio, 28–29.
  11. ^ Craddock, EEEG, 534–45, at pp. 538–40, 542, 544–45; 600. see also Norton, Biblio, 179–81. At this juncture, Pinkerton's reputation had been decidedly mixed: part serious antiquarian enjoying the patronage of Horace Walpole, part near buffoon whose work could evoke "hilarity" and "ridicule." Gibbon eventually chose to prefer the former, believing that "the volatile and fiery particles of his nature have been discharged [leaving] a pure and solid substance endowed with many active and useful energies." Craddock, EEEG, p. 542; Trevor-Roper, "Gibbon's Last Project," pp. 407, 414.
  12. ^ Norton, Biblio, pp. 197; 203–04.
  13. ^ actually published in 1815, no later than Feb. 15.  Ibid., p. 195.
  14. ^ "Review of The Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon ... A New Edition, with considerable Additions. 1815". The Quarterly Review. 12: 368–91. January 1815.
  15. ^ Pocock, EEG, pp. 89–91, 93. Additional background from Brian Norman, chapter 2 in "The Influence of Switzerland on the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century [SVEC] v.2002:03, (Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 2002), 21–32. Norman claims "certainty" of his dating of the work based on a close analysis of Gibbon's scriptional accentuation (pp. 30–31).
  16. ^ Ghosh, "Gibbon's Dark Ages," p. 8.

References edit

  • Bonnard, Georges A., ed. Edward Gibbon: Memoirs of my Life (New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1969; 1966). cited as 'Bonnard, Memoirs'.
  • Craddock, Patricia, ed. The English Essays of Edward Gibbon (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972). cited as 'Craddock, EEEG'.
  • Ghosh, P.R., "Gibbon's Dark Ages: some Remarks on the Genesis of the 'Decline and Fall'," Journal of Roman Studies 73(1983), 1–23. cited as 'Ghosh, "Gibbon's Dark Ages"'.
  • Murray, John, ed. The Autobiographies of Edward Gibbon (London: J. Murray, 1896). includes "Memoranda and Fragments," and "Will of Edward Gibbon Made in 1788." cited as 'Murray, Autobiographies'. online
  • Norton, J.E., ed. A Bibliography of the Works of Edward Gibbon (New York: Burt Franklin Co., 1970; 1940). cited as 'Norton, Biblio'.
  • Pocock, J.G.A. Barbarism and Religion, vol. 1: The Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon, 1737–1764 (Cambridge: 1999). cited as 'Pocock, EEG'.
  • Trevor-Roper, Hugh, "Gibbon's Last Project," in Edward Gibbon Bicentenary Essays (Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 1997), 405–19. cited as 'Trevor-Roper, "Gibbon's Last Project"'.
  • Womersley, David. Gibbon and the 'Watchmen of the Holy City': the Historian and his Reputation, 1776–1815 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2002). cited as 'Womersley, Watchmen'.
    • Womersley, "Gibbon, Edward (1737–1794)," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 22, H.C.G. Matthew; Brian Harrison, eds. (Oxford: 2004), 8–18. cited as 'Womersley, ODNB'.

miscellaneous, works, edward, gibbon, english, historian, edward, gibbon, 1737, 1794, known, primarily, author, magisterial, history, decline, fall, roman, empire, vols, 1776, 1789, both, imposing, length, awesome, erudition, displayed, that, work, have, under. The English historian Edward Gibbon 1737 1794 is known primarily as the author of the magisterial The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 6 vols 1776 1789 Both the imposing length of and awesome erudition displayed in that work have understandably overshadowed his other literary achievements many of which deserve to be noted in their own valuable capacities First Edition Volume I 1796 Contents 1 Description 2 The Miscellaneous Works 3 Other writings 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesDescription editShortly following Gibbon s death his good friend and literary executor John Lord Sheffield undertook to edit and in 1796 published the first of three edition s of the Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon MW 1 in order that the reading public have an opportunity to gain a broader insight into the historian and his overall body of work Various elements of the MW as well as other Gibbon writings not contained therein are listed below along with their pertinent bibliographical detail and descriptive text where available Notes and letters from Sheffield were also included in the MW but only Gibbon s writings follow here Listed contents are exactly those from each volume s table as they appear in the Google Books digitized copies Links to those copies are provided below Where publisher and year follows a work the reference is to the year of its first publication apart from the MW A year following alone with or without a scholar s name refers to the year of Gibbon s composition 2 An asterisk denotes that the work can be found in Craddock EEEG see References The Miscellaneous Works editFIRST edition 2 vols quarto London A Strahan T Cadell Jr amp W Davies March 31 1796 3 Volume I Memoirs of my Life and Writings independently and likely pirated 4 as Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon Esq 2 vols duodecimo London Hunt amp Clarke 1827 online 1898 edition O F Emerson ed incomplete portions of six drafts lettered A F Sheffield aggressively edited both the Memoirs and the MW in order to reflect Gibbon s anti French Revolutionary sentiment while also downplaying his connection with Edmund Burke s eschatological interpretation to prevent any further enlargement of Gibbon s reputation for harboring irreligion or atheism and for other purposes of a more personal nature 5 In 1966 Georges Bonnard published a composite collection chronologically arranged built on the same general lines as Sheffield s along with a thoroughly informative account of the historical background 6 The drafts were not printed in their unedited entireties until 1896 7 Letters from Gibbon to Sheffield et al Letters to and from Edward Gibbon Letter No IX is Gibbon s Lettre sur le gouvernement de Berne see SECOND edition Vol II below Volume II Abstract of the Books Mr Gibbon read with Reflections Extracts from his Journal A Collection of his Remarks and detached Pieces on different Subjects Outlines of the History of the World 1771 Craddock 1784 Ghosh Essai sur l Etude de la Litterature a Londres T Becket amp P A De Hondt 1761 Paris Chez Duchesne 1762 first English translation London T Becket amp P A De Hondt 1764 Gibbon s first published work an invaluable introduction to the Decline and Fall defends the erudits antiquarian scholars against French philosophes especially D Alembert in his Discours preliminaire a l Encyclopedie 1751 who had contemptuously assailed the erudits work as inferior parochial and effete Gibbon recoiled at the charges and strove to reconcile the two groups by proving that all the faculties of the mind may be exercised and displayed by the study of ancient litterature sic The Essai was reviewed with cold indifference in England 8 but on the continent it was met enthusiastically In Paris Gibbon was recognized as a man of letters Sheffield opted not to provide an English translation because the Becket amp De Hondt 1764 already existed 9 Critical Observations on the Design of the Sixth Book of Virgil s The Aenid London P Elmsley 1770 A Dissertation on the Subject of L Homme au Masque de Fer 1774 in English Memoir Justificatif Pour Servir de Reponse a l Expose etc de la Cour de France First ed no place or printer 1779 Second ed London T Harrison amp S Brooke 1779 10 A Vindication of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Chapters of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire London J Dodsley 1779 online Antiquities of the House of Brunswick London J Murray 1814 online An Address amp c recommending Mr John Pinkerton to publish the Scriptores Rerum Anglicarum our Latin Memorials of the Middle Ages 1793 as An Address amp c a well conceived persuasive plan to publish what Gibbon saw as a glaring deficiency in the English archives i e the collected works of all English historians from 500 to 1500 A D including the most ancient of our national writers through the onset of David Hume s true and perfect AEra of modern history The deficiency grew all the more conspicuous when contrasted with similar projects already successfully carried out in Germany Italy France and Denmark The brief work strongly recommends Scot historian and poet John Pinkerton to head the project an editor Gibbon writes replete with a variety of knowledge and well qualified for this study by a spirit of Criticism acute discerning and suspicious 11 For his part Gibbon was prepared to contribute a general introduction and author specific prefaces The first edition was pirated and reprinted twice in 1796 in Ireland and Switzerland 12 3 vols octavo Dublin P Wogan L White et al adds only a long note in French on Mme de Severy in vol 1 at pp 277 78 vol 1 online includes Memoirs of my Life and Writings Appendix Letters to and from Gibbon vol 2 online Letters to and from Edward Gibbon Esq Abstract of the Books Mr Gibbon read with Reflections Extracts from his Journal vol 3 online Extracts from Mr Gibbon s Journal A Collection of his Remarks and detached pieces on different Subjects Outlines of the History of the World Essai sur l Etude de la Litterature Critical Observations on the Sixth Book of The Aenid Dissertation sur l Homme au Masque de Fer Memoir Justificatif A Vindication Antiquities of the House of Brunswick An Address amp c 7 vols octavo Basel J J Tourneisen vols 1 5 contain the London edition minus the French to English translations vols 6 7 incorporate the French to English translations and a reprint of the 1764 English translation of the Essai sur l Etude de la Litterature not in the London edition SECOND edition 5 vols octavo London J Murray 1814 13 14 proclaiming itself a new edition with considerable additions and grouped topically by Sheffield Volume I Memoirs and Letters online Memoirs of my Life and Writings Letters to and from Edward Gibbon Esq Abstract of Mr Gibbon s Will Volume II Letters online Letters to and from Edward Gibbon Esq Lettre sur le gouvernement de Berne Norman 1758 59 Pocock 1764 Letter No IX Mr Gibbon to on the Government of Berne also appears with English translation in FIRST edition Vol 1 pp 388 413 a fictional letter from a Swedish diarist to a Swiss friend comparing the governments of Bern and early Rome Employing language undeniably influenced by Montesquieu Gibbon observes that Bern in adopting an oligarchic form similar to the Venetian has omitted any incorporation of the separation of powers in doing so has ignored the principles of liberty and therefore stands on the brink of despotism Pocock identifies the Lettre as Gibbon s first essay on empire in the context of European history By this time Gibbon has clearly adopted erudition as the dominant interest of his young and his mature life 15 Sheffield s preface intones The excellence of this curious paper will apologize for its great length 31 octavo pages including translation Volume III Historical and Critical online Outlines of the History of the World Memoire sur la Monarchie de Medes 1768 Les Principales Epoques de l Histoire de la Grece et de l Egypte suivant Sir Isaac Newton 1758 Extrait de trois Memoires de M L Abbe de la Bleterie sur la Succession de l Empire Romain 1758 Remarques Critiques sur le Nombre des Habitans dans la Cite des Sybarites Gouvernement Feodal surtout en France 1768 Relation des Noces de Charles Duc de Bourgogne 1768 Critical Researches concerning the Title of Charles the Eighth to the Crown of Naples 1761 An Account of a Letter addressed to Cocchi by chevalier L G Aretino 1764 An Examination of Paul Henri Mallet s Introduction to the History of Denmark 1764 Introduction a l Histoire generale de la Republique des Suisses 1765 67 in Gibbon s own estimation a slight and superficial essay not finished because of his uneasy comprehension of the gap between medieval Swiss and general European historiography 16 Remarques touchant les Doutes Historiques sur la Vie et le Regne du Roi Richard III Par M Horace Walpole 1768 Antiquities of the House of Brunswick 1790 1791 Craddock An Address recommending Mr John Pinkerton to publish the Scriptores Rerum Anglicarum our Latin Memorials of the Middle Ages 1793 as An Address amp c see same title above under FIRST edition Volume II Appendix to an Address explanatory amp c by Mr Pinkerton Volume IV Classical and Critical online Essai sur l Etude de la Litterature On the Character of Brutus 1765 66 Craddock 1769 Ghosh as Digression on the Character of Brutus On Mr Richard Hurd s Commentary on Horace 1762 as Hurd on Horace Nomina Gentesque Antiquae Italiae aka Recueil sur la Geographie ancienne de l Italie 1763 64 An Inquiry whether a Catalogue of the Armies sent into the Field is an essential part of an Epic Poem 1763 An Examination of the Catalogue of Silius Italicus 1763 A Minute Examination of Horace s Journey to Brundusium and of Cicero s Journey into Cilicia 1763 On the Fasti of Ovid 1764 On the Triumphs of the Romans 1764 On the Triumphal Shows and Ceremonies 1764 Remarques sur les Ouvrages et sur le Caractere de Salluste de Jules Cesar de Cornelius Nepos de Tite Live 1756 Remarques Critiques sur un Passage de Plaute 1757 Remarques sur quelques Endroits de Virgile 1757 Critical Observations on the Design of the Sixth Book of the Aeneid 1770 Postscript to Ditto A Vindication of some Passages in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Chapters of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 1779 Volume V Miscellaneous online Memoir Justificatif Pour Servir de Reponse a l Expose etc de la Cour de France 1779 Dissertation on the Allegorical Beings found on the reverses of Medals 1764 Account of a MS by the Abbe G V Gravina del Governo Civile di Roma 1764 Dissertation on the subject of l Homme au Masque de Fer 1774 Observations sur les Memoires Posthumes de M de Cheseaux 1756 Remarques sur quelques Prodiges 1757 Remarques Critiques sur les Dignites Sacerdotales de Jules Cesar 1757 Principes des Poids des Monnoies et des Mesures des Anciens 1759 Dissertation sur les Anciennes Mesures amp c 1759 Sheffield 1768 Ghosh On the Position of the Meridional Line and the supposed Circumnavigation of Africa by the Ancients 1790 or 1791 Sheffield 1789 90 Craddock as The Circumnavigation of Africa Selections from Mr Gibbon s Extraits Raisonnes de mes Lectures from the Journal from the Receuil de mes Observations et Pieces Detachees Common Place Books and Memoranda Remarks on Blackstone s Commentaries 1770 as Abstract of Commentaries by Blackstone Index Expurgatorius 1768 69 Observations on Augerii Gislenii Busbequii Omnia quae extent Notes and Additions to Edward Harewood s View of the various Editions of the Greek and Roman Classics 1793 as Annotations in Har wood Appendix to the Treatise on the Position of the Meridional Line and the supposed Circumnavigation of Africa by the Ancients THIRD edition 1 vol quarto London J Murray April 4 1815 contains all the new material from the second London edition printed in the first edition s quarto format in order to create a complete three volume quarto set Other writings editGeneral Observations on the Fall of the Roman Empire in the West 1772 online first published at the end of volume III 1781 of the Decline and Fall Notes on Modern Europe 1777 Codice Diplomatico 1790 Materials for a Seventh Volume 1790 91 Notes on the Antiquity of the English Universities 1789 91 Marginalia in Herodotus 1789 Habsburgica 1792 93 See also editEdward Gibbon page The Work of J G A Pocock Edward Gibbon section The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Outline of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire including A Gibbon ChronologyNotes edit the full title of 1796 and in square brackets that of 1814 is The Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon Esquire Esq with Memoirs of his Life and Writings composed by himself Illustrated from his Letters with occasional notes and narrative by the Right Honourable John Lord Sheffield in Two Volumes a New Edition with Considerable Additions in Five Volumes sources for this data are Sheffield s tables of contents Norton Biblio Craddock EEEG and Ghosh Gibbon s Dark Ages precise days of publication in all cases from Norton Biblio Norton Biblio p 197 Womersley Watchmen at 235 36 240 and 346 49 Bonnard Memoirs Preface vii xxxiii at xxxi The manuscript originals are all contained with one small exception in the British Museum Gibbon Papers Add MSS 34874 p xiii As to why Gibbon exercised six attempts to recount his life on paper Bonnard opines that he was repeatedly dissatisfied with subject order and length But from draft to draft where Gibbon met with self approval he very often contented himself with simply copying what he had already written p xxiv Murray Autobiographies Gibbon Memoirs The design of my first work Two years elapsed in silence Womersley ODNB p 11 Norton Biblio p 3 additional background in Peter Ghosh Gibbon s First Thoughts Rome Christianity and the Essai sur l Etude de la Litterature 1758 61 Journal of Roman Studies 85 1995 148 64 Pocock EEG chapter 9 The Essai sur l Etude de la Litterature imagination irony and history 208 39 Brian Norman chapter 4 in The Influence of Switzerland on the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century SVEC v 2002 03 Oxford Voltaire Foundation 2002 44 61 Harrison seems certain to have also printed the first edition for official purposes and not for general circulation Norton Biblio 28 29 Craddock EEEG 534 45 at pp 538 40 542 544 45 600 see also Norton Biblio 179 81 At this juncture Pinkerton s reputation had been decidedly mixed part serious antiquarian enjoying the patronage of Horace Walpole part near buffoon whose work could evoke hilarity and ridicule Gibbon eventually chose to prefer the former believing that the volatile and fiery particles of his nature have been discharged leaving a pure and solid substance endowed with many active and useful energies Craddock EEEG p 542 Trevor Roper Gibbon s Last Project pp 407 414 Norton Biblio pp 197 203 04 actually published in 1815 no later than Feb 15 Ibid p 195 Review of The Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon A New Edition with considerable Additions 1815 The Quarterly Review 12 368 91 January 1815 Pocock EEG pp 89 91 93 Additional background from Brian Norman chapter 2 in The Influence of Switzerland on the Life and Writings of Edward Gibbon Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century SVEC v 2002 03 Oxford Voltaire Foundation 2002 21 32 Norman claims certainty of his dating of the work based on a close analysis of Gibbon s scriptional accentuation pp 30 31 Ghosh Gibbon s Dark Ages p 8 References editBonnard Georges A ed Edward Gibbon Memoirs of my Life New York Funk amp Wagnalls 1969 1966 cited as Bonnard Memoirs Craddock Patricia ed The English Essays of Edward Gibbon Oxford Clarendon Press 1972 cited as Craddock EEEG Ghosh P R Gibbon s Dark Ages some Remarks on the Genesis of the Decline and Fall Journal of Roman Studies 73 1983 1 23 cited as Ghosh Gibbon s Dark Ages Murray John ed The Autobiographies of Edward Gibbon London J Murray 1896 includes Memoranda and Fragments and Will of Edward Gibbon Made in 1788 cited as Murray Autobiographies online Norton J E ed A Bibliography of the Works of Edward Gibbon New York Burt Franklin Co 1970 1940 cited as Norton Biblio Pocock J G A Barbarism and Religion vol 1 The Enlightenments of Edward Gibbon 1737 1764 Cambridge 1999 cited as Pocock EEG Trevor Roper Hugh Gibbon s Last Project in Edward Gibbon Bicentenary Essays Oxford Voltaire Foundation 1997 405 19 cited as Trevor Roper Gibbon s Last Project Womersley David Gibbon and the Watchmen of the Holy City the Historian and his Reputation 1776 1815 Oxford Clarendon Press 2002 cited as Womersley Watchmen Womersley Gibbon Edward 1737 1794 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography vol 22 H C G Matthew Brian Harrison eds Oxford 2004 8 18 cited as Womersley ODNB Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miscellaneous Works of Edward Gibbon amp oldid 1147565433, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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