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Richard Warner (antiquary)

Rev. Richard Warner (1763–1857) was an English clergyman and writer of a considerable number of topographical books based on his walks and his interest in antiquarianism.[1]

Early life

Richard Warner was born in St. Marylebone on 18 October 1763. His father, also Richard Warner, was a respectable London tradesman who owned the Two Civet Cats & Olive Tree, an Italian warehouse or delicatessen shop in fashionable New Bond Street.[2]

His early education was undertaken by a Scottish nanny, but at the age of five he was separated from his happy home life and sent to a boarding school located closer to the centre of London. His removal from this unhappy environment came in about 1775 when his father retired and moved his family to the sedate town of Lymington on the south coast. There Warner was educated at Christchurch Grammar School, which was housed in a chamber high above the Lady chapel of the ancient Priory church. He there met and befriended fellow student Harry Burrard of Walhampton near Lymington, who became a distinguished naval officer. From his elevated classroom the schoolboy Warner more than once witnessed large gangs of smugglers landing their contraband on nearby Hengistbury Head in broad daylight. It was while at Christchurch that Warner became interested in antiquities and started to dig into ancient barrows. He met naturalist Gustavus Brander, who resided next to the church.[3]

Warner decided to enter the priesthood and fully expected to attend Winchester College to pursue this career. A family friend had promised to nominate him for a foundation as soon as he became a Poser at the College, but on the very day of the entrance examination he told Warner’s father that he would instead be nominating another boy in obligation to his patron, possibly Lord Somerset, to whom he was chaplain. Warner's dreams of going on to a fellowship at New College, Oxford and subsequent ordination as a churchman were shattered. Bitterly disappointed, he remained at Christchurch for a further seven years. During this time he considered following some of his former school friends into the Royal Navy, and indeed had the option of becoming a Midshipman on board the 44-gun frigate HMS Romulus. However, an impassioned letter from his father persuaded him to reconsider and pursue a land-based career.[3] He instead went to work in an attorney's office.[1]

Warner started his further education late, matriculating at St. Mary's Hall, Oxford in 1787, aged 24.[4] He stayed there for nearly three years. He had a chance to become a curate to the Rev. William Gilpin at Boldre in Hampshire, who needed Warner as he could no longer carry out his duties. Warner had, however, left Oxford without graduating, and there was a diversion: with the support of Warren Hastings, he was ordained by William Markham, Archbishop of York at Bishopthorpe, as from Magdalen Hall. After three months as curate in the village of Wales, South Yorkshire, he went on to Boldre as curate. Gilpin became a mentor to his curate, passing on to Warner his love of literature, walking and the countryside.[1][5]

Later, in 1793, Warner became the Rev. Henry Drummond's curate at Fawley.[1] By this time he had published several further books on Lymington, a transcription of Hampshire's Domesday Book entries, and a reissue of ancient cookery books including a Forme of Cury.

Clergyman in Bath

Warner obtained his first position as a minister at All Saints in Bath in 1794 and after only a year he moved on to the nearby St James' Church. Warner was still writing books for both interest and profit. In 1795 a first novel, a two volume historical Gothic fiction inspired by the ruins of Netley Abbey near Southampton was published. Also in 1795, A History of Hampshire was published under Warner's name, but this is thought to be someone else's work. Now based in Bath he was able to investigate the many local antiquities and published many articles and two books on that city. Warner married in 1801 and became a father in 1802. He was at St James' Church until 1817.[1]

In August 1796 Warner went on holiday to Wales, walking an average 26 miles a day, and recorded his travels in letters that were later published. Their success led further books on other tours, including the Scottish borders, the western counties and another tour of Wales.[1][6]

William Wordsworth and his friend James Losh dined as guests of Warner in July 1798.[7] Losh was a friend, while Wordsworth collected travel writing in the picturesque register, including works by Gilpin and Warner.[8][9]

In 1804 Warner preached a sermon that proved contentious, later published under the title War inconsistent with Christianity, on Matthew 26:52. The audience included officers and men of the Bath Volunteers militia. Warner was defended by Thomas Parsons, a local Baptist minister.[10] The sermon, for a fast day, provoked many replies, but sold well, and Warner repeated it in 1805, on the next fast day.[11] The essay by Parsons supporting him was reprinted in 1813.[12] In 1808, Warner published Letter to the People of England, on Petitioning the Throne for the Restoration of Peace.[13] The prominence of these eirenic works by a Church of England cleric has led to an interpretation of a phrase in William Blake's prophetic book Jerusalem, "ask him if he is Bath or if he is Canterbury", with Warner's "peace party" represented by Bath as metonym. The suggestion is from the Blake scholar David Erdman.[14]

Later life

Warner published satirical books on Bath society under noms de plume, 1807–9. As priest, he took on also the parish of Great Chalfield in 1809, presented to it by Sir Harry Burrard-Neale: it is thought he never resided there.[15][16]

In 1814 Warner started a fortnightly periodical, Omnium (the) Gatherum; or, Bath, Bristol, and Cheltenham literary repository, edited anonymously with Joseph Hunter. Just seven numbers were published.[17] Hunter believed that "liberality of sentiment" of sentiment had held Warner back from further advancement in his clerical career, despite popular success: he supported Charles James Fox and parliamentary reform, but opposed Catholic emancipation. George Henry Law, a later Bishop of Bath and Wells, proved more sympathetic.[6]

Warner died in 1857 and was outlived by his wife, Ann Pearson, who died in 1865. They had two daughters.[6]

Works

  • A companion in a tour round Lymington (1789)
  • Hampshire extracted from Domes-day book (1789)
  • Antiquitates culinariae; or, Curious tracts relating to the culinary affairs of the Old English, with a preliminary discourse, notes, and illus. (1791)
  • An attempt to ascertain the situation of the ancient Clausentum (1792)
  • Topographical remarks relating to the South-western parts of Hampshire (1793)
  • General view of the agriculture of the county of Hants (1794)
  • The history of the Isle of Wight (1795)
  • Netley Abbey: a Gothic story (1795)
  • An illustration of the Roman antiquities discovered at Bath (1797)
  • A Walk through Wales (1799)
  • A walk through some of the western counties of England (1800)
  • History of Bath (1801)
  • A Second Walk through Wales (1800)
  • A tour through the northern counties of England, and the borders of Scotland (1802)[18]
  • Chronological History of our Lord and Saviour: an English Diatessaron (1803)
  • National Blessings reasons for National Gratitude[19]
  • Bath characters : or, sketches from life / by Peter Paul Pallet (1808)
  • Divine Providence evidenced in the Causes, Consequences, and Termination of the late War (1814)[20]
  • A Letter to ... Henry Ryder, D.D. Lord Bishop of Gloucester, on the Admission to Holy Orders of Young Men, Holding ... Evangelical Principles, to which is Added a Biographical Sketch of the Late Rev. Archibald Maclaine (1818),[21] with a reply in the same year from "Mephibosheth"[22]
  • Sermons on the Epistles or Gospels for the Sundays throughout the year (including Christmas-Day and Good-Friday) for the use of families and country congregations... (1819)
  • Illustrations, historical, biographical and miscellaneous, of the novels by the author of Waverley: with criticism, general and particular (1823)
  • Literary Recollections (1830)
  • Great Britain's crisis!: reform; retrenchment; economy; the farmers and labouring poor: a letter to the Rt. Hon. Sir James Graham, Bart. (1831) JSTOR 60204077


References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Warner, Richard (1763-1857)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  2. ^ Nicholas Tracy (2002). The Age of Sail: The International Annual of the Historic Sailing Ship. Conway Maritime Press. pp. 132–. ISBN 978-0-85177-949-2.
  3. ^ a b Warner, Richard (1830). Literary Recollections. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green.
  4. ^ s:Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715-1886/Warner, Richard (2)
  5. ^ "CCEd, Ordination Record, ID 35423". Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  6. ^ a b c Hicks, Michael. "Warner, Richard". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/28766. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. ^ Juliet Barker (13 October 2009). Wordsworth: A Life. HarperCollins. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-06-185021-9.
  8. ^ Woof, Robert (2 September 2003). William Wordsworth: The Critical Heritage, Volume I 1793-1820. Routledge. p. 28. ISBN 9781134966738. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  9. ^ Burwick, Frederick (26 March 2009). The Oxford Handbook of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. OUP Oxford. p. 95. ISBN 9780199229536. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  10. ^ Brock, Peter (8 March 2015). Pacifism in Europe to 1914. Princeton University Press. p. 374. ISBN 9781400867493.
  11. ^ Ceadel, Martin (1996). The Origins of War Prevention: The British Peace Movement and International Relations, 1730–1854. Clarendon Press. p. 189. ISBN 9780198226741.
  12. ^ Linden, Wilhelmus Hubertus (1987). The International Peace Movement, 1815–1874. Tilleul Publications. p. 8. ISBN 9789080013414.
  13. ^ Parr, Samuel; Bohn, Henry George (1827). Bibliotheca Parrianna: A catalogue of the library of the late reverend and learned Samuel Parr ... Printed for J. Bohn. p. 679. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  14. ^ Damon, S. Foster (14 May 2013). A Blake Dictionary: The Ideas and Symbols of William Blake. UPNE. p. 38. ISBN 9781611683417. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  15. ^ 'Parishes: Great Chalfield', A History of the County of Wiltshire: Volume 7 (1953), pp. 59-66. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=115458 Date accessed: 27 December 2009.
  16. ^ Gentleman's Magazine, Or Monthly Intelligencer. Edward Cave. 1858. p. 102.
  17. ^ Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous English Literature. Ardent Media. 1926. p. 252.
  18. ^ s:A tour through the northern counties of England, and the borders of Scotland
  19. ^ National Blessings reasons for National Gratitude: a sermon [on Ps. cvii. 2] preached ... December 5, 1805, the day of General Thanksgiving. To which are prefixed animadversions on two sermons ... by the Rev. E. Poulter ... and a character of the late Right Hon. W. Pitt. 1806.
  20. ^ O'Gorman, Frank; Donald, Diana (14 December 2005). Ordering the World in the Eighteenth Century. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 62. ISBN 9780230518889. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  21. ^ Warner, Richard (1818). A Letter to ... Henry Ryder, D.D. Lord Bishop of Gloucester, on the Admission to Holy Orders of Young Men, Holding ... Evangelical Principles, to which is Added a Biographical Sketch of the Late Rev. Archibald Maclaine. Richard Crutwell. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  22. ^ A Reply to a letter addressed by the Rev. R. Warner ... to ... H. Ryder, Lord Bishop of Gloucester, on the admission to Holy Orders of young men holding (what are commonly called) Evangelical principles. By Mephibosheth. With a prefatory address to the same ... prelate. 1818.

External links

  • Antiquitates Culinariae by Richard Warner, PDF

richard, warner, antiquary, richard, warner, 1763, 1857, english, clergyman, writer, considerable, number, topographical, books, based, walks, interest, antiquarianism, contents, early, life, clergyman, bath, later, life, works, references, external, linksearl. Rev Richard Warner 1763 1857 was an English clergyman and writer of a considerable number of topographical books based on his walks and his interest in antiquarianism 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Clergyman in Bath 3 Later life 4 Works 5 References 6 External linksEarly life EditRichard Warner was born in St Marylebone on 18 October 1763 His father also Richard Warner was a respectable London tradesman who owned the Two Civet Cats amp Olive Tree an Italian warehouse or delicatessen shop in fashionable New Bond Street 2 His early education was undertaken by a Scottish nanny but at the age of five he was separated from his happy home life and sent to a boarding school located closer to the centre of London His removal from this unhappy environment came in about 1775 when his father retired and moved his family to the sedate town of Lymington on the south coast There Warner was educated at Christchurch Grammar School which was housed in a chamber high above the Lady chapel of the ancient Priory church He there met and befriended fellow student Harry Burrard of Walhampton near Lymington who became a distinguished naval officer From his elevated classroom the schoolboy Warner more than once witnessed large gangs of smugglers landing their contraband on nearby Hengistbury Head in broad daylight It was while at Christchurch that Warner became interested in antiquities and started to dig into ancient barrows He met naturalist Gustavus Brander who resided next to the church 3 Warner decided to enter the priesthood and fully expected to attend Winchester College to pursue this career A family friend had promised to nominate him for a foundation as soon as he became a Poser at the College but on the very day of the entrance examination he told Warner s father that he would instead be nominating another boy in obligation to his patron possibly Lord Somerset to whom he was chaplain Warner s dreams of going on to a fellowship at New College Oxford and subsequent ordination as a churchman were shattered Bitterly disappointed he remained at Christchurch for a further seven years During this time he considered following some of his former school friends into the Royal Navy and indeed had the option of becoming a Midshipman on board the 44 gun frigate HMS Romulus However an impassioned letter from his father persuaded him to reconsider and pursue a land based career 3 He instead went to work in an attorney s office 1 Warner started his further education late matriculating at St Mary s Hall Oxford in 1787 aged 24 4 He stayed there for nearly three years He had a chance to become a curate to the Rev William Gilpin at Boldre in Hampshire who needed Warner as he could no longer carry out his duties Warner had however left Oxford without graduating and there was a diversion with the support of Warren Hastings he was ordained by William Markham Archbishop of York at Bishopthorpe as from Magdalen Hall After three months as curate in the village of Wales South Yorkshire he went on to Boldre as curate Gilpin became a mentor to his curate passing on to Warner his love of literature walking and the countryside 1 5 Later in 1793 Warner became the Rev Henry Drummond s curate at Fawley 1 By this time he had published several further books on Lymington a transcription of Hampshire s Domesday Book entries and a reissue of ancient cookery books including a Forme of Cury Clergyman in Bath EditWarner obtained his first position as a minister at All Saints in Bath in 1794 and after only a year he moved on to the nearby St James Church Warner was still writing books for both interest and profit In 1795 a first novel a two volume historical Gothic fiction inspired by the ruins of Netley Abbey near Southampton was published Also in 1795 A History of Hampshire was published under Warner s name but this is thought to be someone else s work Now based in Bath he was able to investigate the many local antiquities and published many articles and two books on that city Warner married in 1801 and became a father in 1802 He was at St James Church until 1817 1 In August 1796 Warner went on holiday to Wales walking an average 26 miles a day and recorded his travels in letters that were later published Their success led further books on other tours including the Scottish borders the western counties and another tour of Wales 1 6 William Wordsworth and his friend James Losh dined as guests of Warner in July 1798 7 Losh was a friend while Wordsworth collected travel writing in the picturesque register including works by Gilpin and Warner 8 9 In 1804 Warner preached a sermon that proved contentious later published under the title War inconsistent with Christianity on Matthew 26 52 The audience included officers and men of the Bath Volunteers militia Warner was defended by Thomas Parsons a local Baptist minister 10 The sermon for a fast day provoked many replies but sold well and Warner repeated it in 1805 on the next fast day 11 The essay by Parsons supporting him was reprinted in 1813 12 In 1808 Warner published Letter to the People of England on Petitioning the Throne for the Restoration of Peace 13 The prominence of these eirenic works by a Church of England cleric has led to an interpretation of a phrase in William Blake s prophetic book Jerusalem ask him if he is Bath or if he is Canterbury with Warner s peace party represented by Bath as metonym The suggestion is from the Blake scholar David Erdman 14 Later life EditWarner published satirical books on Bath society under noms de plume 1807 9 As priest he took on also the parish of Great Chalfield in 1809 presented to it by Sir Harry Burrard Neale it is thought he never resided there 15 16 In 1814 Warner started a fortnightly periodical Omnium the Gatherum or Bath Bristol and Cheltenham literary repository edited anonymously with Joseph Hunter Just seven numbers were published 17 Hunter believed that liberality of sentiment of sentiment had held Warner back from further advancement in his clerical career despite popular success he supported Charles James Fox and parliamentary reform but opposed Catholic emancipation George Henry Law a later Bishop of Bath and Wells proved more sympathetic 6 Warner died in 1857 and was outlived by his wife Ann Pearson who died in 1865 They had two daughters 6 Works EditA companion in a tour round Lymington 1789 Hampshire extracted from Domes day book 1789 Antiquitates culinariae or Curious tracts relating to the culinary affairs of the Old English with a preliminary discourse notes and illus 1791 An attempt to ascertain the situation of the ancient Clausentum 1792 Topographical remarks relating to the South western parts of Hampshire 1793 General view of the agriculture of the county of Hants 1794 The history of the Isle of Wight 1795 Netley Abbey a Gothic story 1795 An illustration of the Roman antiquities discovered at Bath 1797 A Walk through Wales 1799 A walk through some of the western counties of England 1800 History of Bath 1801 A Second Walk through Wales 1800 A tour through the northern counties of England and the borders of Scotland 1802 18 Chronological History of our Lord and Saviour an English Diatessaron 1803 National Blessings reasons for National Gratitude 19 Bath characters or sketches from life by Peter Paul Pallet 1808 Divine Providence evidenced in the Causes Consequences and Termination of the late War 1814 20 A Letter to Henry Ryder D D Lord Bishop of Gloucester on the Admission to Holy Orders of Young Men Holding Evangelical Principles to which is Added a Biographical Sketch of the Late Rev Archibald Maclaine 1818 21 with a reply in the same year from Mephibosheth 22 Sermons on the Epistles or Gospels for the Sundays throughout the year including Christmas Day and Good Friday for the use of families and country congregations 1819 Illustrations historical biographical and miscellaneous of the novels by the author of Waverley with criticism general and particular 1823 Literary Recollections 1830 Great Britain s crisis reform retrenchment economy the farmers and labouring poor a letter to the Rt Hon Sir James Graham Bart 1831 JSTOR 60204077References Edit a b c d e f Lee Sidney ed 1899 Warner Richard 1763 1857 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 59 London Smith Elder amp Co Nicholas Tracy 2002 The Age of Sail The International Annual of the Historic Sailing Ship Conway Maritime Press pp 132 ISBN 978 0 85177 949 2 a b Warner Richard 1830 Literary Recollections London Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green s Alumni Oxonienses the Members of the University of Oxford 1715 1886 Warner Richard 2 CCEd Ordination Record ID 35423 Retrieved 1 March 2018 a b c Hicks Michael Warner Richard Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 28766 Subscription or UK public library membership required Juliet Barker 13 October 2009 Wordsworth A Life HarperCollins p 154 ISBN 978 0 06 185021 9 Woof Robert 2 September 2003 William Wordsworth The Critical Heritage Volume I 1793 1820 Routledge p 28 ISBN 9781134966738 Retrieved 1 March 2018 Burwick Frederick 26 March 2009 The Oxford Handbook of Samuel Taylor Coleridge OUP Oxford p 95 ISBN 9780199229536 Retrieved 1 March 2018 Brock Peter 8 March 2015 Pacifism in Europe to 1914 Princeton University Press p 374 ISBN 9781400867493 Ceadel Martin 1996 The Origins of War Prevention The British Peace Movement and International Relations 1730 1854 Clarendon Press p 189 ISBN 9780198226741 Linden Wilhelmus Hubertus 1987 The International Peace Movement 1815 1874 Tilleul Publications p 8 ISBN 9789080013414 Parr Samuel Bohn Henry George 1827 Bibliotheca Parrianna A catalogue of the library of the late reverend and learned Samuel Parr Printed for J Bohn p 679 Retrieved 1 March 2018 Damon S Foster 14 May 2013 A Blake Dictionary The Ideas and Symbols of William Blake UPNE p 38 ISBN 9781611683417 Retrieved 1 March 2018 Parishes Great Chalfield A History of the County of Wiltshire Volume 7 1953 pp 59 66 URL http www british history ac uk report aspx compid 115458 Date accessed 27 December 2009 Gentleman s Magazine Or Monthly Intelligencer Edward Cave 1858 p 102 Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous English Literature Ardent Media 1926 p 252 s A tour through the northern counties of England and the borders of Scotland National Blessings reasons for National Gratitude a sermon on Ps cvii 2 preached December 5 1805 the day of General Thanksgiving To which are prefixed animadversions on two sermons by the Rev E Poulter and a character of the late Right Hon W Pitt 1806 O Gorman Frank Donald Diana 14 December 2005 Ordering the World in the Eighteenth Century Palgrave Macmillan UK p 62 ISBN 9780230518889 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Warner Richard 1818 A Letter to Henry Ryder D D Lord Bishop of Gloucester on the Admission to Holy Orders of Young Men Holding Evangelical Principles to which is Added a Biographical Sketch of the Late Rev Archibald Maclaine Richard Crutwell Retrieved 2 March 2018 A Reply to a letter addressed by the Rev R Warner to H Ryder Lord Bishop of Gloucester on the admission to Holy Orders of young men holding what are commonly called Evangelical principles By Mephibosheth With a prefatory address to the same prelate 1818 External links EditAntiquitates Culinariae by Richard Warner PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Warner antiquary amp oldid 1083917337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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