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Richard Mant

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Name
  
Richard Mant

Role
  
Writer

Children
  
Frederick Woods Mant


Richard Mant wwwhymntimecomtchimgmanmantrjpg

Died
  
1848, Ballymoney, United Kingdom

Books
  
The simpliciad, The book of common prayer

Education
  
Trinity College, Oxford, Winchester College

See the Destined Day Arise - Kenwood Music


Richard Mant (February 12, 1776 – 1848) was an English churchman who became a bishop in Ireland. He was a prolific writer, his major work being a History of the Church of Ireland.

Contents

Life

He was born at Southampton, where his father Richard Mant D.D. was headmaster of the King Edward VI School. He was educated at Winchester College and at Trinity College, Oxford which he entered in 1793. He graduated B.A. in 1797, and became a Fellow of Oriel College in 1798, a position he held to 1804.

Mant was ordained in the Church of England, holding a curacy at Southampton in 1802. He was appointed to the vicarage of Coggeshall, Essex in 1810 and in 1811 he became Bampton Lecturer. In 1816 he was made rector of St Botolph's, Bishopsgate, and in 1820 became Bishop of Killaloe and Kilfenora, in Ireland. In 1823 he was translated to Down and Connor, and from 1842 was the Bishop of Down, Connor and Dromore when the two dioceses united.

Works

In 1808 Mant published The Simpliciad, a satirical poem that parodied Poems, in Two Volumes (1807) by William Wordsworth. He gave notes relating his parodies to the originals. The aim of the work included the other Lake Poets, Robert Southey and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, with To a Young Ass by Coleridge used to guy the group as a whole.

Mant's Ancient Hymns from the Roman Breviary (1837) was one of the earliest collections of translated Latin hymnody in English. He belonged to a group of revivalist translators of Latin hymns, with John Chandler (1806–1876) and Isaac Williams. John Ellerton commented on his good taste, but also discerned a lack of understanding of the group of hymns he was handling. The Psalms in an English Metrical Version (1824) were influenced by Robert Lowth's theories of biblical poetry, the psalms becoming "stiff and stately odes" according to John Julian.

Other works included:

  • A biblical commentary written with George D'Oyly
  • History of the Church of Ireland (1839–1841; 2 vols.).
  • An Appeal to the Gospel (1812), Bampton Lectures.
  • Family

    Mant married Elizabeth Wood (died 2 April 1846), of a Sussex family, on 22 December 1804, Their children were Walter Bishop Mant, another son, and a daughter.

    References

    Richard Mant Wikipedia