Social England : a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature and manners, from the earliest times to the present day . stitution of the BritishSchool ot Archa3ology at Athens (1886). The study of classical archeology and topography was happilyunited with that of the criticism of the Greek Testament in theperson of Christopher Wordsworth, Bishop of Lincoln, whoedited Theocritus (1844) and wrote on the gmjiiti (or wall-scribblings) of Pompeii, and also on Athens and Attica andthe Topography of Greece, divining in the course of


Social England : a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature and manners, from the earliest times to the present day . stitution of the BritishSchool ot Archa3ology at Athens (1886). The study of classical archeology and topography was happilyunited with that of the criticism of the Greek Testament in theperson of Christopher Wordsworth, Bishop of Lincoln, whoedited Theocritus (1844) and wrote on the gmjiiti (or wall-scribblings) of Pompeii, and also on Athens and Attica andthe Topography of Greece, divining in the course of thislast work the long-lost site of the oracle of Dodona. In 1856he pul)lished a commentary on the Greek Testament, rich incitations from ])atristio literature. Fuller reference is madeto the German coinmcntators in the edition of Henry Alford,Dean of Canterbury. Several of the Pauline Epistles inparticular wen^ admirably edited by .Joseph Barber Jjightfoot,Bishop of Durham fp. 595), who was also the editor of Clement ENGLISH SilinLAHSIlir ^IXCI-J Jr.,... 669 of Rome, :uul Igniitius and Polyiarii Til (•(iiiiifitidii with textual criticism must be mentioned, besides llie names ot. ) AND MAX-lii:Al)Kl) MUX IUOJl TlIK OF ASSUE-NASllMAL. KIXG OF ASSYRIA; EXCAVATED BY snt A. II. LAVAED. (British Musenm.) Tre-eUes (d. 1»70), Scrivener, and Hort (d. 1892), the Revisionby the joint hxbours of Enghsh and American scholars of theAuthorised Nersion of the New Testament, a work which occu-pied ten and a half years, from June, 1870, to November, 1880. 670 THE SUaCESSIOX OF THE DEMOCRACY. Hebrew. ]n the study of Hebrew almost the only notable names of Cambridge scholars in the present century have been those ofSanuiel Lee (17!), Professor of Hebrew and Arabic atCanibridcfe; W. H. Mill, his successor in the Chair of Hebrew,who died in 1853, and was better known as a learned theologianand scholar; and Frederic Field (1801-85), honorary Fellowof Trinity, whose editi


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