Cardinal

1822 SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH Philosopher (1765-1832) Mardocks, Nr WARE to INVERNESS

Description: 1822 SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH Philosopher (1765-1832) Mardocks, Nr WARE to INVERNESSThis product data sheet is originally written in English. 1822 SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH Philosopher (1765-1832) Mardocks, Nr WARE to INVERNESS, Fine letter from his Home to James Grant of Bught, Inverness, Posted FREE from WARE in Hertfordshire, the letter wrapper also signed by him and relating to Grants Son being rememembered on a marble tablet in the vestibule of the chapel of the East India College at Haileybury College, together with a printed card (dated 1821) of the Latin inscription and a poem said to be copied by Charles Grant in memory of his Brother James Grant Sir James Mackintosh FRS FRSE (24 October 1765 – 30 May 1832) was a Scottish jurist, Whig politician and Whig historian. His studies and sympathies embraced many interests. He was trained as a doctor and barrister, and worked also as a journalist, judge, administrator, professor, philosopher and politician. Early life Mackintosh was born at Aldourie, 7 miles from Inverness, the son of Captain John Mackintosh of Kellachie (Kyllachy, near Tomatin in Inverness-shire).[1] His mother was Marjory MacGillivray, a daughter of Alexander MacGillivray and his wife Anne Fraser, who was a sister to Brigadier-General Simon Fraser of Balnain.[2] Both his parents were from old Highland families. His mother died while he was a child, and his father was frequently abroad, so he was brought up by his grandmother, and then schooled at Fortrose Seminary academy. At age thirteen he proclaimed himself a Whig, and during playtime he persuaded his friends to join him in debates modelled on those of the House of Commons. He went in 1780 to King's College, University of Aberdeen, where he made a lifelong friend of Robert Hall, later a famous preacher. In 1784 he began to study medicine at Edinburgh University. He participated to the full in the intellectual ferment, became friendly with Benjamin Constant, but did not quite neglect his medical studies, and took his degree in 1787. In 1788 Mackintosh moved to London, then agitated by the trial of Warren Hastings and the first lapse into insanity of George III. He was much more interested in these and other political events than in his professional prospects. He was also a founder member of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (later the RSPCA) French Revolution Mackintosh was soon absorbed in the question of the time, the French Revolution. In April 1791, after long meditation, he published his Vindiciae Gallicae: A Defence of the French Revolution and its English Admirers, a reply to Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France. It placed the author in the front rank of European publicists, and won him the friendship of some of the most distinguished men of the time. The success of the Vindiciae finally decided him to give up the medical for the legal profession. He was called to the bar in 1795 and gained a considerable reputation there as well as a tolerable practice. Vindiciae Gallicae was the verdict of a philosophic liberal on the development of the French Revolution up to the spring of 1791. The excesses of the revolutionaries compelled him a few years later to oppose them and agree with Burke, but his earlier defence of the rights of man is a valuable statement of the cultured Whig's point of view at the time. Mackintosh was the first to see Burke's Reflections as "the manifesto of a counter revolution". Charles James Fox singled out Mackintosh's book as that which did most justice to the French Revolution, and he preferred it over Burke and Thomas Paine.[6] After Paine's Rights of Man, Mackintosh's book was the most successful reply to Burke and Burke's biographer F. P. Lock considers it "one of the best of the replies to Burke, in some respects superior to Rights of Man". The poet Thomas Campbell claimed that had it not been for Mackintosh's book, Burke's anti-revolutionary opinions would have become universal amongst the educated classes and that he ensured that he became "the apostle of liberalism". Mackintosh wrote to Burke on 22 December 1796, saying that "From the earliest moments of reflexion your writings were my chief study and delight...The enthusiasm with which I then embraced them is now ripened into solid Conviction by the experience and meditation of more mature age. For a time indeed seduced by the love of what I thought liberty I ventured to oppose your Opinions without ever ceasing to venerate your character...I cannot say...that I can even now assent to all your opinions on the present politics of Europe. But I can with truth affirm that I subscribe to your general Principles; that I consider them as the only solid foundation both of political Science and of political prudence".[10] Burke replied that "As it is on all hands allowed that you were the most able advocate for the cause which you supported, your sacrifice to truth and mature reflexion, adds much to your glory".[11] However, in private Burke was sceptical of what he considered Mackintosh's "supposed conversion".[12] Burke invited Mackintosh to spend Christmas with him at his home in Beaconsfield, where he was struck by Burke's "astonishing effusions of his mind in conversation. Perfectly free from all taint of affectation...Minutely and accurately informed, to a wonderful exactness, with respect to every fact relative to the French Revolution". When Mackintosh visited Paris in 1802 during the Peace of Amiens, he responded to compliments from French admirers of his defence of their revolution by saying: "Messieurs, vous m’avez si bien refuté". Lawyer As a lawyer his greatest public efforts were his lectures (1799) at Lincoln's Inn on the law of nature and nations, of which the introductory discourse was published and ran to several editions; the resulting fame helped open doors for him later in life. Mackintosh was also famed for his speech in 1803 defending Jean Gabriel Peltier, a French refugee, against a libel suit instigated by Napoleon – then First Consul (military dictator) of France. Peltier had argued that Napoleon should be killed at a time when Britain and France were at peace. In front of an audience of ambassadors, it took only one minute for the jury to convict Jean-Gabriel, but the sentence was never applied, it was decidedly a political trial. J-G Peltier was no more satisfied with the judgment than Napoleon. The newspapers of France received the defense of praising the pleading under pain of suppression ! The speech was widely published in English and also across Europe in a French translation by Madame de Staël, who became a friend of Mackintosh's. In 1803 he was knighted. Judge of Bombay He was appointed Recorder (chief judge) of Bombay, taking up the post in 1804. Within a few months he had established the Bombay Literary Society at his home, where a circle of intellectuals and friends would meet to discuss the history, geography, zoology and botany of the sub-continent as well as its peoples and languages, customs and religions. The group would later evolve into the Asiatic Society of Mumbai. He was however not at home in India, where he became ill, was disappointed by his literary progress with the mooted History of England, and was glad to leave for England in November 1811. Member of Parliament Mackintosh declined the offer of Spencer Perceval to resume political life under the wing of the dominant Tory party, despite prospects of office. He entered Parliament in July 1813 as a Whig. He was the member for Nairn until 1818, and afterwards for Knaresborough, till his death. In London society, and in Paris during his occasional visits, he was a recognized favourite. On Madame de Staël's visit to London he was able to keep up in talk with her. A close friend was Richard Sharp MP, known as "Conversation Sharp".[15] and both men belonged to the Whig social group, the King of Clubs. Mackintosh's parliamentary career was marked by his liberalism: he opposed reactionary measures of the Tory government; he supported and later succeeded Samuel Romilly in his efforts to reform the criminal code; and took a leading part both in Catholic emancipation and in the Reform Bill. He was, however, too diffuse and elaborate to be a telling speaker in parliament. Professor From 1818 to 1824 he was professor of law and general politics in the East India Company's College at Haileybury. and took a house at Mardoks, near Ware, on 12 August 1823, Mackintosh wrote a two-sheet letter from Cadogan Place, London to James Savage asking for source material for Savage's edition of The History of Taunton by Joshua Toulmin. In the midst of the attractions of London society and of his parliamentary avocations Mackintosh felt that the real work of his life was being neglected. His great ambition was to write a history of England; he also cherished the idea of making some worthy contribution to philosophy. It was not till 1828 that he set about the first task of his literary ambition. This was his Dissertation on the Progress of Ethical Philosophy, prefixed to the seventh edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica. The dissertation, written mostly in ill-health and in snatches of time taken from his parliamentary engagements, was published in 1831. It was severely attacked in 1835 by James Mill in his Fragment on Mackintosh. About the same time he wrote for the Cabinet Cyclopaedia a History of England from the Earliest Times to the Final Establishment of the Reformation. A privy councillor since 1828, Mackintosh was appointed Commissioner for the affairs of India under the Whig administration of 1830. History of the Revolution in England in 1688 His history of the Glorious Revolution, for which he had done considerable research and collected a large amount of material, was not published till after his death. Mackintosh only completed it to the time of James II's abdication. However his voluminous notes on the Glorious Revolution came into the possession of Thomas Babington Macaulay, who used them for his own History of the Revolution. Mackintosh's notes stopped in the year of 1701, where Macaulay's History also ends. Mackintosh's work was published in 1834 and in his review of it, Macaulay said that he had "no hesitation" in proclaiming the book as "decidedly the best history now extant of the reign of James the Second" but lamented that "there is perhaps too much disquisition and too little narrative". He went on to praise Mackintosh: "We find in it the diligence, the accuracy, and the judgment of Hallam, united to the vivacity and the colouring of Southey. A history of England, written throughout in this manner, would be the most fascinating book in the language. It would be more in request at the circulating libraries than the last novel". Freemasonry He was Initiated into Scottish Freemasonry in Lodge Holyrood House (St. Luke's), No.44, (Edinburgh) on 28 November 1785. Death Sir James Mackintosh died at home, 15 Langham Place, London at the age of 66. A chicken bone became stuck in his throat, causing a traumatic choking episode. The bone was removed, but he died a month later on 30 May 1832. He was buried in Hampstead on 4 June. Legacy The Mackintosh River in Tasmania was named in his honour, by Henry Hellyer in November 1828 CHARLES GRANT (1746-1823), British politician, was born at Aldourie, Inverness-shire, on the 16th ofApril 1746, the day on which his father, Alexander Grant, was killed whilst fighting for the Jacobites at Culloden. When a young man Charles went to India, where he became secretary, and later a member of the board of trade. He returned to Scotland in 1790, and in 1802 was elected to parliament as member for the county of Inverness. In the House of Commons his chief interests were in Indian affairs, and he was especially vigorous in his hostility to the policy of the Marquess Wellesley. In 1805 he was chosen chairman of the directors of the East India Company and he retired from parliament in 1818. A friend of William Wilberforce, Grant was a prominent member of the evangelical party in the Church of England; he was a generous supporter of the church's missionary undertakings. He was largely responsible for the establishment of the East India college, which was afterwards erected at Haileybury. He died in London on the 31st of October 1823. His eldest son, Charles, was created a peer in 1835 as Baron Glenelg.  : Powered by SixBit's eCommerce Solution1822 SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH Philosopher (1765-1832) Mardocks, Nr WARE to INVERNESS, Fine letter from his Home to James Grant of Bught, Inverness, Posted FREE from WARE in Hertfordshire, the letter wrapper also signed by him and relating to Grants Son being rememembered on a marble tablet in the vestibule of the chapel of the East India College at Haileybury College, together with a printed card (dated 1821) of the Latin inscription and a poem said to be copied by Charles Grant in memory of his Brother James Grant Sir James Mackintosh FRS FRSE (24 October 1765 – 30 May 1832) was a Scottish jurist, Whig politician and Whig historian. His studies and sympathies embraced many interests. He was trained as a doctor and barrister, and worked also as a journalist, judge, administrator, professor, p Written By Sir James Macintosh City/Town/Village/Place Ware Related Interests RSPCA Certification Guaranteed Original Country England Estate or House name Mardocks Scotland County Inverness-shire Signed Yes Family Surname Mackintosh UK Counties Hertfordshire Autograph Type Manuscript Letter Era 1820 -1830 Addressed To James Grant of Bught Type Original Document Document Type Original Manuscript Letter Year of Issue 1822 Related Interests 2 Haileybury College

Price: 455.7 USD

Location: Maryport

End Time: 2024-11-28T20:29:35.000Z

Shipping Cost: 9.72 USD

Product Images

1822 SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH Philosopher (1765-1832) Mardocks, Nr WARE to INVERNESS1822 SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH Philosopher (1765-1832) Mardocks, Nr WARE to INVERNESS1822 SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH Philosopher (1765-1832) Mardocks, Nr WARE to INVERNESS

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Written By: Sir James Macintosh

City/Town/Village/Place: Ware

Related Interests: RSPCA

Certification: Guaranteed Original

Country: England

Estate or House name: Mardocks

Scotland County: Inverness-shire

Signed: Yes

Family Surname: Mackintosh

UK Counties: Hertfordshire

Autograph Type: Manuscript Letter

Era: 1820 -1830

Addressed To: James Grant of Bught

Type: Original Document

Document Type: Original Manuscript Letter

Year of Issue: 1822

Related Interests 2: Haileybury College

Brand: Unbranded

MPN: Does not apply

Recommended

5 silicone Skirt Chart Green /Silver Glitter  5-70 Lure Spinnerbait jig Bass Tab
5 silicone Skirt Chart Green /Silver Glitter 5-70 Lure Spinnerbait jig Bass Tab

$3.38

View Details
🔥SUPER FAST⚡-4/5⭐️star Sticker-❄️Read DESCRIPTION
🔥SUPER FAST⚡-4/5⭐️star Sticker-❄️Read DESCRIPTION

$3.25

View Details
Dynamic Vitality Bundle - Sea Moss Multivitamin & Shilajit Power - US Stock
Dynamic Vitality Bundle - Sea Moss Multivitamin & Shilajit Power - US Stock

$13.89

View Details
Anime Space Fighters Type-C RESCULPT! (Set of 6) Wargame Miniatures
Anime Space Fighters Type-C RESCULPT! (Set of 6) Wargame Miniatures

$10.00

View Details
Dubia Roaches Small,Medium,Large Reptile Feeders Live Feeders Free Shipping
Dubia Roaches Small,Medium,Large Reptile Feeders Live Feeders Free Shipping

$105.00

View Details
1x Marvel Go Album All 1-5 Stars Sticker (Mono_poly_go Stickers)
1x Marvel Go Album All 1-5 Stars Sticker (Mono_poly_go Stickers)

$1.50

View Details
Washington Commanders NFL Football Sticker Decal S587
Washington Commanders NFL Football Sticker Decal S587

$4.95

View Details
Bee Venom Gynecomastia Heating Oil, Men Therm Bee Venom, for Chest~US
Bee Venom Gynecomastia Heating Oil, Men Therm Bee Venom, for Chest~US

$5.99

View Details
Monopoly Go All 1&2&3stars stickers❗read description❗
Monopoly Go All 1&2&3stars stickers❗read description❗

$1.35

View Details
Willow Spinnerbait Blades (10 ct) Hammered Nickel Plated 5 sizes to choose from
Willow Spinnerbait Blades (10 ct) Hammered Nickel Plated 5 sizes to choose from

$3.29

View Details