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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: ECG-EMS |
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EDGEWORTH, RICHARD LOVELL (1744-1817) , British writer, was born at Bath on the 31st of May 1744. The greater part of his life, however, was spent at Edgeworthtown, or Edgeworthstown, in the county of Longford, Ireland, where the Edgeworth family had been settled for upwards of 1 50 years. He was of gentle bloodhis father being the son of Colonel Francis Edgeworth, and his mother, Jane Lovell, being the daughter of Samuel Lovell, a Welsh judge. Richard's mother taught him to read at a very early age; and from childhood he had a strong love for mechanical science. The Rev. Patrick Hughes initiated him in Lilye's Latin Grammaran office he also performed for Goldsmith, who was born on the property of the Edgeworthsand his public education began, in August 1952, in a school at Warwick. He subsequently attended Drogheda
Shortly after the birth
house
(April 1780), recommending her husband to marry her sister Elizabeth; and they were actually married on Christmas Day, 1780. In 1782 Edgeworth returned to Ireland, determined to improve his estate, educate his seven children, and ameliorate the condition of the tenants. Up to this point Edgeworth has told his own story in his Memoirs. The rest of his life is written by his daughter, who opens with a lengthy panegyric on her father as a model landlord (Memoirs, ii. 12-36). In 1785 he was associated with others in founding the Royal Irish Academy; and, during the two succeeding years, mechanics and agriculture occupied most of his time. In October 1789 his friend Day was killed by a fall from his horse, and this trial was soon followed by the loss of his daughter Honora, who had just reached her fifteenth year. In 1792 the health of one of Edgeworth's sons took him to Clifton, where he remained with his family for about two years, returning in 1794 to Edgeworthstown. Ireland was, at that time, harassed by internal disturbances, and threats of a French invasion, and Edgeworth offered to establish telegraphic communication of his own invention throughout the country, This offer was declined. A full account of the matter is given in Edgeworth's Letter to Lord Charlemont on the Telegraph; and his apparatus is explained in an " Essay on the art of Conveying Swift and Secret Intelligence," published in the sixth
Practical Education (1798) was written in collaboration with his daughter Maria, and embodied the experience of the authors in dealing with children. " So commenced," says Miss Edge-worth, " that literary partnership which, for so many years, was the pride
interest
special
In 1798 Edgeworth married Miss Beaufort, and was elected M.P. for the borough of St John's Town, Longford. The same year, too, saw a hostile landing of the French and a formidable rebellion; and for a short time the Edgeworths took refuge
Many of Edgeworth's works were suggested by his zeal for the education of his own children. Such were Poetry Explained for Young People (1802), Readings in Poetry (1816), A Rational Primer (unpublished), and the parts of Early Lessons contributed by him. His speeches in the Irish parliament have also been published; and numerous essays, mostly on scientific subjects, ' For an appreciation of the two Edgeworths from the teacher's point of view, see Prof. L. C. Miall in the Journal of Education (August 1, 1894).have appeared in the Philosophical Transactions, the Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy, the Monthly Magazine and Nicholson's Journal. The story of his early life, told by himself, is fully as entertaining as the continuation by Maria, as it contains less dissertation and more incident. One of his daughters by his first marriage, Anna Maria, married Dr Beddoes and became the mother of T. L. Beddoes, the poet. See Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth, Esq., begun by himself and concluded by his daughter, Maria Edgeworth (2 vols., 1820, 3rd and revised ed. 1844). A selection from this, giving an optimistic view of him, Richard Lovell Edgeworth (1896), was edited by Mrs Lionel Tollemache. End of Article: EDGEWORTH, RICHARD LOVELL (1744-1817) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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