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William Guthrie (historian)

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Name
  
William Guthrie

Died
  
March 9, 1770

Role
  
Writer

Education
  
University of Aberdeen

Books
  
A New System of Modern Geography: Or, A Geographical, Historical, and Commercial Grammar ; and Present State of the Several Nations of the World ...

William Guthrie (1708–1770) was a Scottish writer and journalist, now remembered as a historian.

Contents

Life

The son of an Episcopalian clergyman, he was born at Brechin, Forfarshire, in 1708. He was educated at Aberdeen University with a view to becoming a parochial schoolmaster, but he settled in London in 1730, and tried literature.

He was first engaged on parliamentary debates for the Gentleman's Magazine, his reports being revised by Samuel Johnson. He gradually made a reputation as a political writer, and in 1745 received a pension of £200 a year from the Pelham administration. He asked for and was granted a renewal of his pension by the Bute government in 1762.

Guthrie was referred to by Johnson in terms of some respect. He died on 9 March 1770, and was buried in Marylebone.

Works

In 1763 he published his first book, a ‘Complete List of the English Peerage.’ In spite of revision by aristocrats, this work is inaccurate. His next work was a ‘History of England from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to 1688,’ 4 vols., Lond. 1744–51; a first attempt to base history on parliamentary records. About 1764–7 he published, along with collaborators, ‘A General History of the World, from the Creation to the Present Time,’ in twelve volumes; this was favourably noticed in The Critical Review, it was said by the author himself. In 1767 appeared ‘A General History of Scotland,’ 10 vols. It is inaccurate, particularly in the early periods.

Probably his most noted book was his ‘Geographical, Historical, and Commercial Grammar’ (1770), which reached numerous editions, and was translated into French in 1801. Besides translations from Quintilian (1756) and Cicero (1744–54–55–58), he also wrote ‘The Friends,’ a sentimental novel, in two volumes (1754), and ‘Remarks on English Tragedy’ (1757).

References

William Guthrie (historian) Wikipedia