Samuel Barker (Hebraist) Explained
Samuel Barker (1686–1759) was an English Hebraist.
Life
Barker was the son of Augustin Barker of South Luffenham and Thomasyn Tryst of Maidford, Northants,[1] and inherited the Lordship of the Manor of Lyndon, Rutland by the bequest of his father's second cousin Sir Thomas Barker, 2nd Bt of Lyndon (1648-1706/7).[2] Sir Thomas was a member of the 'Order of Little Bedlam' or Bedlam Club based at Burghley House.[3] Samuel entered Wadham College, University of Oxford in June 1704 and graduated B.A. on 13 February 1707/8.[4]
In 1717 Samuel married Sarah, only daughter of William Whiston, in whose memoirs he is mentioned.[5] Their interests coincided closely, 'Wicked'[6] Will Whiston being the translator-editor of Josephus. Whiston in later life resided with Samuel at Lyndon Hall[7] and died there. Samuel was the father of Thomas Barker (1722–1809), called 'The father of meteorology', and was therefore the father-in-law of Ann Barker née White, the sister of Gilbert White of Selborne.[8] Gilbert White maintained correspondence with Samuel Barker junr. (grandson of Samuel), who like his great-grandfather Whiston attended Clare College, University of Cambridge.[9]
Works
He wrote (in Latin) several learned tracts, which were collected and published (1761) in one quarto volume after his death, together with a Hebrew grammar, on which he had long been engaged.[10] John Nichols said of it, 'This was a juvenile production – the produce of the ingenious Author's leisure hours.'[11] It contained:
- Ancient Hebrew Poesy Restored
- On the Anacreontic songs
- On Greek accents
- Ancient Ionic writings
- On consonant and vowel letters
- On the pronunciation of the Hebrew language
He was the author of a letter, dated 7 November 1723, to Joseph Wasse, rector of Aynho, Northamptonshire, concerning a passage in the Sigeion inscription,[12] which may be found in the Biblioteca Literaria of Samuel Jebb and William Bowyer, No. 10 (1724).
References
- Attribution
Notes and References
- See Abstract of Release of Marriage Portion published online by National Archives Online Leicester Record Office, Conant MSS, DG11/967.
- Will of Sir Thomas Barker, written 1704, see abstract published online by National Archives Online Leicester Record Office, Conant MSS, DG11/1013. A family tree is given in John Kington (ed), Thomas Barker, Weather Journals of a Country Squire (Rutland Local History and Record Society 1988) .
- Bryan Waites, 'Sir Thomas Barker and the Order of Little Bedlam', Rutland Local History and Record Society Newsletter No. 1 Pt 10 (April 2010), pp 5–6. read here
- Oxford University Alumni 1500–1714, Vol. I p. 71, column 2, as 'son of Austin of Medford, Northants.'
- W. Whiston, Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Mr William Whiston (Author, London 1749), p. 271 (Google).
- See Jonathan Swift's 'Ode for Music, On the Longitude' (Swift's Works, ed. 1803, xxiv. 39), set to music by Benjamin Cooke: read here.
- John Cornforth, 'Lyndon Hall, Rutland. The home of Lady Conant', Country Life 10 Nov. 1966.
- H.A. Evans, Highways and Byways in Northampton and Rutland Pocket edition (Macmillan & Co., London 1924), 161–62.
- Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses 1261–1900, Samuel Barker admitted 1777.
- Poesis vetus Hebraica restituta; accedunt quædam de Carminibus Anacreonticis, de accentibus Græcis; de scriptura veteri Ionica, de literis consonantibus et vocalibus, et de pronunciatione linguæ Hebraicæ. Auctore Samuele Barker armigero, nuper de Lyndon, in com. Rotelandiæ, (Londini: Prostat venalis apud J. Whiston & B. White, 1761). In modern reprints the name in the title is mistakenly written 'Baker'.
- J. Nichols, Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century, (Nichols and Bentley, London 1812–1815) Vol. 9: Additions to the Eighth Volume, p. 680.
- Stone stela (6th century B.C.), The British Museum, Accession number: 1816,0610.107 (British Museum).