Birth Date: | 1753 |
Death Date: | 1791 |
Alma Mater: | Emmanuel College, Cambridge |
Main Interests: | Philology |
Major Works: | William Bellenden's Tracts; variorum edition of Horace |
Henry Homer, called the younger (1753–1791) was an English classical scholar.
The eldest of the seventeen children of Henry Homer the elder, he was born at Warwick in 1753. In 1758 he entered Rugby School, of which, at the age of fourteen, he was the head boy. He then studied for three years at Birmingham. In November 1768 he was admitted to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, under Richard Farmer, where he became acquainted with Samuel Parr, who helped to direct his studies. Among his close college friends were William Bennet and George Dyer. He graduated B.A. in 1773, M.A. in 1776, and B.D. in 1783.
Homer was elected a Fellow of his college in 1778, and returned to the university from Warwickshire, where he had been living for about three years, soon after his election. About this time he was admitted into deacon's orders. He now resided chiefly at Cambridge, and spent much time in the university library, turning his attention to philological studies. In consequence of religious scruples, Homer declined to take priest's orders in compliance with the college statutes, and his fellowship was therefore declared vacant in June 1788. He died at Birdingbury of a rapid decline on 4 May 1791, and was buried in the churchyard there.
In 1787, he joined with Parr in the republication of William Bellenden's Tracts, and prepared editions of several classical authors. At the suggestion of Parr, he undertook a variorum edition of Horace, but died before its completion. It was finally published by Charles Combe, and occasioned a public literary quarrel between Combe and Parr.
Homer edited:
The works which he left unfinished were completed by his brothers Arthur Homer and Philip Bracebridge Homer.
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