Samuel Horsley

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Samuel Horsley
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Samuel Horseley
Religion Church of England
Senior posting
Based in England
Title Dean of Westminster
Period in office 1781-1806
Predecessor John Thomas
Successor William Vincent
Previous post Bishop of St. David's, Bishop of Rochester, Bishop of St. Asaph
Personal
Date of birth 15 September 1733
Place of birth London
Date of death 4 October 1806
Place of death Brighton

Samuel Horsley (London, 15 September 17334 October 1806 in Brighton) was an English divine.

Entering Trinity Hall, Cambridge, he became LL.B. in 1758 without graduating in arts, and in the following year succeeded his father in the living of Newington Butts in Surrey. Horsley was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1767; and secretary in 1773, but, in consequence of a difference with the president (Sir Joseph Banks) he withdrew in 1784. In 1768 he attended the eldest son of the 4th Earl of Aylesford to Oxford as private tutor; and, after receiving through the earl and Bishop Lowth various minor preferments, which by dispensations he combined with his first living, he was installed in 1781 as archdeacon of St Albans.

Horsley now entered in earnest upon his famous controversy with Joseph Priestley, who denied that the early Christians held the doctrine of the Trinity. In this controversy, conducted on both sides in the fiercest polemical spirit, Horsley showed the superior learning and ability. His aim was to lessen the influence which the prestige of Priestley's name gave to his views, by indicating inaccuracies in his scholarship and undue haste in his conclusions. For the energy displayed in the contest Horsley was rewarded by Lord Chancellor Thurlow with a prebendal stall at Gloucester; and in 1788 the same patron procured his promotion to the see of St David's.

As a bishop, Horsley was energetic both in his diocese, where he strove to better the position of his clergy, and in parliament. The efficient support which he afforded the government was acknowledged by his successive translations to Rochester in 1793, and to St Asaph in 1802. With the see of Rochester he held the deanery of Westminster. Besides the controversial Tracts, which appeared in 1783-1785, 1786, and were republished in 1789 and 1812, Horsley's more important works are:

  • Apollonii Pergaei inclinationum libri duo (1770)
  • Remarks on the Observations ... for determining the acceleration of the Pendulum in Lat. 7o 51' (1774)
  • Isaaci Newtoni Opera quae extant Omnia, with a commentary (5 vols 4to, 1779-1785)
  • On the Prosodies of tke Greek and Latin Languages (1796)
  • Disquisitions on Isaiah xviii. (1796)
  • Hosea, translated ... with Notes (1801)
  • Elementary Treatises on ... Mathematics (1801)
  • Euclidis elernentorum libri priores XII. (1802)
  • Euclidis datorum liber (1803)
  • Virgil's Two Seasons of Honey, &c. (1805)
  • papers in the Philosophical Transactions from 1767 to 1776

After his death there appeared:

  • Sermons (1810-1812)
  • Speeches in Parliament (1813)
  • Book of Psalms, translated with Notes (1815)
  • Biblical Criticism (1820)
  • Collected Theological Works (6 vols 8vo, 1845).

[edit] References

Religious titles
Preceded by
Edward Smallwell
Bishop of St David's
1788–1793
Succeeded by
William Stuart
Preceded by
John Thomas
Bishop of Rochester
1793–1802
Succeeded by
Thomas Dampier
Dean of Westminster
1793–1802
Succeeded by
William Vincent
Preceded by
Lewis Bagot
Bishop of St Asaph
1802–1806
Succeeded by
William Cleaver