Photo de l'auteur

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Sir James Emerson Tennent

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Emerson, James
Date de naissance
1804-04-07
Date de décès
1869-03-06
Sexe
Male
Lieu de naissance
Belfast, Ireland
Lieu du décès
London, England
Professions
Lawyer
Colonial administrator
Politician
Courte biographie
Sir James Emerson Tennent (Belfast 1804 – London 1869), was a British from Northern Ireland. He studied law at Belfast and Trinity College Dublin, where he received a doctorate in law. His second name, “Tennent”, was added to Emerson in 1832, after his marriage to Letitia Tennent.

He took up the cause of Greek independence, and travelled in Greece, publishing a Picture of Greece (1826), Letters from the Aegean (1829), and a History of Modern Greece (1830); and he was called to the English bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1831. In that year he married Letitia, daughter and co-heiress (with her cousin, Robert James Tennent, M.P. for Belfast, 1848–52) of William Tennent, a wealthy merchant at Belfast, who died of cholera in 1832, and he adopted by royal licence the name of his wife in addition to his own.[1]

He entered Parliament in 1832 as member for Belfast. In 1841 he became Secretary to the Board of Control, and in 1843 he was presented with a service of plate by the calico printers of Great Britain as an acknowledgment of his getting a bill passed in Parliament for the copyright of calico designs. He was a friend of both Charles Dickens and Dickens's biographer John Forster, and was the dedicatee of Dickens's last completed novel Our Mutual Friend (1865).

Membres

Statistiques

Œuvres
12
Membres
33
Popularité
#421,955
Évaluation
4.0
ISBN
12