Frederic Farrar

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Frederic Farrar, by Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=1002183 / CC BY SA 3.0

#1831_births
#1903_deaths
#Deans_of_Canterbury
#Archdeacons_of_Westminster
#Alumni_of_King's_College_London
#English_Christian_universalists
#People_educated_at_King_William's_College
#Fellows_of_the_Royal_Society
#Canons_of_Westminster
#19th-century_Christian_universalists
Frederic William Farrar (Bombay, 7 August 1831 – Canterbury, 22 March 1903) was a cleric of the Church of England (Anglican), schoolteacher and author.
He was a pallbearer at the funeral of Charles Darwin in 1882.
He was a member of the Cambridge Apostles secret society.
He was the Archdeacon of Westminster from 1883 to 1894, and Dean of Canterbury Cathedral from 1895 until his death in 1903.
Farrar was born in Bombay, India, and educated at King William's College on the Isle of Man, King's College London and Trinity College, Cambridge.
At Cambridge he won the Chancellor's Gold Medal for poetry in 1852.
He was for some years a master at Harrow School and, from 1871 to 1876, the headmaster of Marlborough College.
Farrar spent much of his career associated with Westminster Abbey.
He was successively a canon there, rector of St Margaret's (the church next door), archdeacon of the Abbey.
He later served as Dean of Canterbury; and chaplain in ordinary, i.
e.
attached to the Royal Household.
He was an eloquent preacher and a voluminous author, his writings including stories of school life, such as Eric, or, Little by Little and St.
Winifred's about life in a boys' boarding school in late Victorian England, and two historical romances.
Farrar was a classics scholar and a comparative philologist, who applied Charles Darwin's ideas of branching descent to the relationships between languages, engaging in a protracted debate with the anti-Darwinian linguist Max Müller.
While Farrar was never convinced by the evidence for evolution in biology, he had no theological objections to the idea and urged that it be considered ...




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1831 births
1903 deaths
Archdeacons of Westminster
Canons of Westminster
Deans of Canterbury
Fellows of the Royal Society