Henry Beveridge (historian) explained

Henry Beveridge
Birth Date:1799
Birth Place:Scotland
Occupation:Lawyer, Translator and Historian
Children:Henry Beveridge (1837–1929)[1] [2]

Henry Beveridge (1799–1863) was a Scottish lawyer, translator and historian.[3]

The Calvin Translation Society founded in May 1843 in Edinburgh. It published (1844–1855) translations of Calvin's books: Institutes of the Christian Religion, Commentaries, Tracts and Letters. Beveridge translated for the Calvin Translation Society included a collection of Calvin's Tracts Relating to the Reformation, three volumes in 1844 and he translated Institutes of the Christian Religion in 1845.[3] His edition of the Institutes of the Christian Religion came out in three volumes, and contained in the introductory matter items that have been, not with-out loss, dropped out of later printings in both America and Britain. Beveridge had intended to enter the ministry; he later trained for the law and became a lawyer, but made writing his chief employment. He was engaged by the publishers Blackie and Son to write a A Comprehensive History of India, which he produced in three volumes (1858–63), without leaving British shore;[4] the book was printed in London and in New Delhi.

Works

Translations Works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BEVERIDGE, Henry – Persons of Indian Studies by Prof. Dr. Klaus Karttunen.
  2. Web site: BEVERIDGE, Henry – Persons of Indian Studies by Prof. Dr. Klaus Karttunen.
  3. Book: McNeill, John T.. Calvin: Institutes of the Christian Religion. 1 January 1960. Westminster John Knox Press. 9781611644456 . Google Books.
  4. Book: Woolf, Daniel. A Global History of History. 17 February 2011. Cambridge University Press. 9780521875752 . Google Books.