BRIAN WALTON
\bɹˈa͡ɪən wˈɒltən], \bɹˈaɪən wˈɒltən], \b_ɹ_ˈaɪ_ə_n w_ˈɒ_l_t_ə_n]\
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An English bishop and biblical scholar; born at Seymour, Yorkshire, 1600; died in London, Nov. 29, 1661. He was made chaplain to Charles II. and bishop of Chester at the Restoration. His greatest work is "Biblia Sacra Polyglotta" (6 vols., folio 1657), including the Hebrew original of the Old Testament, the Samaritan Pentateuch, the Chaldee, Syriac, Arabic, Persian, and Latin Vulgate, with various readings, notes, etc.; still thought to be "the most complete Biblical apparatus in any language". He wrote in 1658 his "Dissertation on the Antiquity and Authority of his Texts", in later editions called the "Prolegomena", under which name it was published in the original Latin (2 vols., 1827-28). "The Considerator Considered", etc. (1659), was written in answer to Dr. John Owen's "Vindication of the Purity and Integrity of the Hebrew and Greek Texts", etc. which was a criticism upon his great Biblical work.
By Charles Dudley Warner
Word of the day
syncranterian
- With teeth in a continuous row. [Greek] With teeth in a continuous row(zool.).
Nearby Words
- breziliene
- brezilin
- brezonic
- brh
- brian reid
- brian walton
- briar
- briar pipe
- briar root
- briard
- briarean