Child, Francis James, 1825-1896
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Child, Francis James, 1825-1896
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Child, Francis James, 1825-1896
Child, Francis James
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Child, Francis James
Francis James Child
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Francis James Child
Child, FrancisJames, 1825-1896
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Child, FrancisJames, 1825-1896
Child, Francis James, active 1855-1862, Professor of Rhetoric at Harvard College
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Child, Francis James, active 1855-1862, Professor of Rhetoric at Harvard College
Child, Francis James, 1827-1896
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Child, Francis James, 1827-1896
Child, F. J. 1825-1896 (Francis James),
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Child, F. J. 1825-1896 (Francis James),
Child, Francis J. 1825-1896
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Child, Francis J. 1825-1896
Child, F. J.
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Child, F. J.
Child, F. J. 1825-1896
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Child, F. J. 1825-1896
Child, Professor 1825-1896 (Francis James),
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Child, Professor 1825-1896 (Francis James),
チャイルド, フランシス・ジェイムズ
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チャイルド, フランシス・ジェイムズ
Child, Francis James, fl. 1855-1862
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Child, Francis James, fl. 1855-1862
Child Professor 1825-1896
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Child Professor 1825-1896
Čajl'd, Džems
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Čajl'd, Džems
Child, Francis J.
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Child, Francis J.
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Biographical History
The materials in this bound volume were generated due to a manuscript called the "Harris manuscript." The Harris manuscript was written down by the sisters Amelia Harris (1815-1891) and Jane Harris (1823-1897). They compiled a family repertoire of Scottish ballads, mainly passed on orally to the sisters by their mother, Grace Dow Harris (Mrs. David Harris) (b.1782). This manuscript and some correspondence was purchased in 1873 by Professor Francis James Child of Harvard University who was a scholar of ballads, in order to help make these songs known. Other correspondents involved with the Harris manuscript include: William Edmondstoune Aytoune, Norval Clyne, and others.
Child was an American philologist, Harvard graduate (A.B. 1846), and Harvard professor of rhetoric, oratory, and English. George Lyman Kittredge (Harvard A.B. 1882) was Child's protégé and successor at Harvard, and he organized and described this material after Child's death in 1896.
Child, born in Boston, Massachusetts, graduated from Harvard University in 1846. He became the Harvard Boylston professor of rhetoric, oratory, and elocution in 1851 and in 1876 became professor of English. He was known for studying, collecting, and cataloging folk ballads and compiled the authoritative work, The English and Scottish popular ballads.
American author and philologist.
Child graduated from Harvard in 1846 and taught rhetoric and oratory and English at Harvard.
Child graduated from Harvard University in 1846. He was an American philologist and professor of English at Harvard who studied, collected, and cataloged folk ballads.
Epithet: Professor of Rhetoric at Harvard College
Francis James Child (1825-1896) was born in Boston, the third of eight children of Joseph Child and his wife Mary James Child. He was a graduate of Harvard College, A.B. 1846. After graduation he remained at Cambridge as tutor in mathematics (1846-1848) and later in history and political economy (1848-1849). From 1849 to 1851 he studied philosophy, the classics, and Germanic philology at the University of Göttingen. Upon his return to Harvard he became the Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory. In 1860, he married Elizabeth Ellery Sedgwick, daughter of Robert Sedgwick of New York, and they had three daughters and one son.
In 1876, Child was made professor of English and devoted himself thereafter to the teaching and study of literature. His chief works were on Spenser and Chaucer, and he is best known for his research into the history of English and Scottish ballads, first publishing English and Scottish Ballads (8 vols., 1857-1858), and later, his edition of 305 distinct English and Scottish ballads and their textual variants, English and Scottish Popular Ballads (5 vols., originally issued in 10 parts, 1882-1898). Ballad texts for this edition were culled from manuscript and printed materials extant at the end of the 19th century. This published text was planned "to include every obtainable version of every extant English or Scottish ballad, with the fullest possible discussion of related songs or stories in the popular literature of all nations." The tenth part was virtually complete, except for a general introduction to the whole work, at the time of Child's death in 1896.
At his death, Child left behind a great wealth of manuscripts, copies, letters, and other material pertaining to his study of ballads. George Lyman Kittredge (Harvard A.B. 1882), who was Child's former student, was Child's successor to the Boylston Professorship, and later was Harvard's first Gurney Professor of English (1917). It was Kittredge who spent hundreds of hours organizing this material which he referred to as the "Child MSS" or "Child Manuscripts." The 33 volumes described in this finding aid are the organized product of Kittredge's work, and reflect the order which he imposed upon it. It was Kittredge, also, who completed the last volume of Child's ballad compendium and saw it through to publication. The English and Scottish Popular Ballads is now said to be the publication that established the groundwork for English-speaking ballad scholarship in the 20th century.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/22185356
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50037993
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n50037993
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2344992
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/9N1W-FYV
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
American literature
Ballads, English
Ballads, English
Ballads, English
Ballads, Scots
Ballads, Scots
Ballads, Slavic
English philology
Folk literature
Folk songs, English
Folk songs, Scots
Manuscripts
Manuscripts, Scottish
Music
Oral tradition
Philologists
Philologists
Scotland
Scots
Nationalities
Britons
Activities
Occupations
Collector
Legal Statuses
Places
United States
AssociatedPlace
Scotland
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Scotland
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Carlisle, Cumberland
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Great Britain
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Rome
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Scotland
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England
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Shetland (Scotland)
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Germany
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