William Coxe  

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William Coxe (17 March 1747 – 8 June 1828), English historian, son of Dr. William Coxe, Physician to the Royal Household, was born in London. After his father's death his mother Martha married John Christopher Smith, who was Handel's amanuensis and son of his friend Johann Christoph Schmidt.

Contents

Education at Eton & Cambridge

Educated at Eton College, he proceeded to King's College, Cambridge, and was elected a fellow of this society in 1768.

Holy Orders & Gentlemen's Tutor

In 1771 he took holy orders, and afterwards visited many parts of Europe as tutor and travelling companion to various noblemen and gentlemen, including Lord Herbert, son of the Earl of Pembroke and Samuel Whitbread of the brewing family.

Church career

In 1786 he was appointed vicar of Kingston upon Thames, and in 1788 rector of Fugglestone St Peter-with-Bemerton, Wiltshire. He also held the rectory of Stourton, Wiltshire from 1801 to 1811 and that of Fovant from 1811 until his death. In 1791 he was made prebendary of Salisbury, and in 1804 Archdeacon of Wiltshire.

Marriage

He married in 1803 Eleanora, daughter of William Shairp, consul-general for Russia, and widow of Thomas Yeldham of St Petersburg.

Works

During a long residence at Bemerton Coxe was mainly occupied in literary work. His:

are very valuable for their insight into the history of the 18th century.

His History of the House of Austria (London, 1807, new ed. 1853 and 1873), and Memoirs of the Bourbon Kings of Spain (London, 1813), give evidence of careful and painstaking work on the part of the author. The style, however, as in all his works, is remarkably dull.

His other works are mainly accounts of his travels:

  • Sketches of the Natural, Political and Civil State of Switzerland (London, 1779)
  • Account of the Russian Discoveries between Asia and America (London, 1780)
  • Account of Prisons and Hospitals in Russia, Sweden and Denmark (London, 1781)
  • Travels into Poland, Russia, Sweden and Denmark (London, 1784)
  • Travels in Switzerland (London, 1789)
in a series of letters to [the son of] William Melmoth, esq., printed for T. Cadell, London, three volumes.
Dedicated to Henry William Portman,esq., of Bryanston.
  • Letter on Secret Tribunals of Westphalia (London, 1796)
  • Historical Tour in Monmouthshire (London, 1801).

He also edited Gay's Fables, and wrote a Life of John Gay (Salisbury, 1797), Anecdotes of G. F. Handel and J. C. Smith (London, 1798), and a few other works of minor importance. Some of his books have been translated into French, and several have gone through two or more editions.





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