Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

George Ritchie Kinloch

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
George Kinloch


Died
  
1877

Books
  
Biblioteheca Curiosa -The Ballad Book., Ancient Scottish Ballads

People also search for
  
Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe, James Maidment, Archibald Pitcairne

George Ritchie Kinloch (1796 - 19 April 1877) was a Scottish lawyer, philanthropist and antiquarian best known today for publishing a collection of ballads.

Contents

Life

Kinloch was probably born in Jamaica, the sixth of a family of eight, where his father George Kinloch was serving as Deputy Judge Advocate with the Portland Regiment and a Master of Chancery. The family soon returned to Stonehaven, Kincardineshire, Scotland; where his father died 22 April 1802, aged 60. Educated as a lawyer, George Ritchie Kinloch worked as a clerk for several advocates depute. Later he was employed by George Cranstoun. He was appointed assistant register of deeds at Edinburgh in 1842, and served as registrar of deeds from 1851 to 1869. He was the treasurer of the Patterson and Pope relief fund for the poor for many years.

Literary career

Kinloch's assistance in compiling the supplementary volumes of Jamieson's dictionary (1825) was acknowledged by the author. In 1827 he published his Ancient Scottish Ballads, Recovered from tradition, listed by Sir Walter Scott among the "more important" of later collections of ballads. A Ballad Book published the same year was republished in 1885. He also edited in 1830 several seventeenth-century Scottish texts for the Maitland Club and in 1837 one for the Abbotsford Club. He published a Reliquiæ Antiquæ Scoticæ in 1848.

References

George Ritchie Kinloch Wikipedia


Similar Topics