William Popple Explained

To be distinguished from his grandson William Popple (colonial administrator) (1701–1764), government official and writer.[1]

William Popple (1638–1708) was an English Unitarian merchant, the translator of John Locke's A Letter Concerning Toleration.[2]

Life

He was son of Edmund Popple, sheriff of Hull in 1638, who married Mary, daughter of the Rev. Andrew Marvell, and sister of Andrew Marvell the poet; he was therefore the nephew of Marvell, under whose guidance he was educated, and with whom he corresponded. He became a London merchant, and in 1676 was residing at Bordeaux. Ten years later, he dated from there a small expository work, entitled A Rational Catechism (London, 1687).

He was appointed secretary to the board of trade in 1696, and became intimate with John Locke (a commissioner of the board from 1696 to 1700), whose Letter on toleration he was the first to translate from the Latin (London, 1689). Some manuscript translations in his hand are in the British Library (Add MS 8888).

He died in 1708, in the parish of St Clement Danes; his widow Mary was living in Holborn in 1709.

References

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. Oxford Biography Index Number 101022545 Oxford DNB Thomas Seccombe, ‘Popple, William (1700/01–1764)’, rev. C. S. Rogers, first published Sept 2004 ;online edn, Jan 2010, 642 words
  2. C. Robbins Absolute Liberty: The Life and Thought of William Popple, 1638-1708 Transactions of the Unitarian Historical Society, V 1967