John Cook (moderator 1816) explained

Type:minister
John Cook
Birth Name:John Cook
Birth Date:24 November 1771
Death Date:28 November 1824
Module:
Embed:yes
Term Start1:9 May 1793
Term End1:5 May 1802
Office2:professor of Hebrew at St Andrews
Term Start2:5 May 1802
Term End2:27 September 1808
Office3:professor of Biblical Criticism at St Andrews
Term Start3:27 September 1808
Term End3:28 November 1824
Term Start4:16 May 1816
Term End4:May 1817

John Cook (24 November 1771 - 28 November 1824) was a Scottish minister, historian and amateur artist. He was a pioneer in the field of Biblical Criticism.

Life

He was born on 24 November 1771 in St Andrews the first son of John Cook[1] and his wife, Janet Hill, sister of George Hill. He was the first of 12 children. His birthdate is sometimes shown in records as 1771 to disguise his birth being less than 9 months after his parents marriage.

He studied Divinity at St Andrews University under his father and was licensed to preach by the Church of Scotland. In 1793 he became minister of Kilmany.

A technically skilled album of his drawings (mainly townscapes in St Andrews) from 1797 are in the possession of the University of St Andrews.[2] In 1802 he was appointed Professor of Hebrew at St Andrews University. He was later given the first university Chair in Biblical Criticism (1808-1824)

He died in St Andrews on 28 November 1824 aged 54.

Family

He married his cousin, Elisabeth Hill, daughter of George Hill. They had at least seven children.He was father to John Cook (1807-1869) who in turn was father to Rachel Cook.

His brother was George Cook.

He married 2 July 1803, Elizabeth (died 12 September 1848), daughter of George Hill, D.D., Principal of St Mary's College, and had issue —

Publications

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Full text of "Fasti ecclesiae scoticanae : the succession of ministers in the Church of Scotland from the reformation" . 2020-02-26 . 429–30.
  2. Web site: Album by Professor John Cook 1797 (ms38799) | St Andrews Digital Collections . Arts.st-andrews.ac.uk . 2020-02-26.
  3. Web site: Cook . John . An Inquiry into the Books of the New Testament . Google Books . 1821 . 19 June 2023.
  4. Web site: 52 Weeks of Inspiring Illustrations, Week 13: John Cook's unusual perspectives … – Special Collections blog.