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Charles Isaac Elton

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Name
  
Charles Elton

Role
  
English Politician

Education
  
Balliol College


Charles Isaac Elton

Died
  
April 23, 1900, Whitestaunton, United Kingdom

Books
  
The Great Book‑Collectors, Origins of English History, William Shakespeare - his family, An Account of Shelley's Visits to F, The career of Columbus

Charles Isaac Elton, QC (6 December 1839 – 23 April 1900) was an English lawyer, antiquary, and politician.

Charles Isaac Elton Charles Isaac Elton Wikipedia

He is most famous for being the author of the bestselling book The Great Book-Collectors.

Charles Isaac Elton A Catalogue of a Portion of the Library of Charles Isaac Elton and

He was born in Southampton. Educated at Cheltenham and Balliol College, Oxford, he was elected a fellow of Queen's College in 1862. He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1865. His remarkable knowledge of old real property law and custom helped him to an extensive conveyancing practice and he took silk in 1885. He sat in the House of Commons for West Somerset in 1884–1885 and for Wellington, Somerset from 1886 to 1892. In 1869 he succeeded to his uncle's property of Whitestaunton Manor, near Chard, Somerset.

During the later years of his life he retired to a great extent from legal practice, and devoted much of his time to literary work. He died at Whitestaunton. Elton's principal works were

  • The Great Book-Collectors (1864);
  • The Tenures of Kent (1867);
  • Treatise on Commons and Waste Lands (1868);
  • Law of Copyholds (1874);
  • Origins of English History (1882);
  • Custom and Tenant Right (1882).
  • William Shakespeare: His Family and Friends (1903), ed from posthumous papers by A Hamilton Thompson
  • Virginia Woolf often quotes his poem "Luriana Lurilee" in her novel To the Lighthouse (1927), although the poem itself was not published until 1945.

    References

    Charles Isaac Elton Wikipedia


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