George Grub
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

George Grub (1812–1892) was a Scottish law professor and church historian.


Life

Grub was born at
Old Aberdeen Old Aberdeen is part of the city of Aberdeen in Scotland. Old Aberdeen was originally a separate burgh, which was erected into a burgh of barony on 26 December 1489. It was incorporated into adjacent Aberdeen by Act of Parliament in 1891. It ret ...
on 4 April 1812, the only child of George Grub, a respectable citizen and convener of the trades at Old Aberdeen, and his wife, Christian Yolum. He entered
King's College, Aberdeen King's College in Old Aberdeen, Scotland, the full title of which is The University and King's College of Aberdeen (''Collegium Regium Abredonense''), is a formerly independent university founded in 1495 and now an integral part of the Universi ...
, at the age of thirteen and a half, and afterwards entered the law-office of Alexander Allan, advocate in Aberdeen, under whom he served the apprenticeship required by the
Society of Advocates in Aberdeen The Society of Advocates in Aberdeen is an independent non-regulatory professional body of solicitors in the northern Scottish city of Aberdeen and its surrounding area. It is a membership organisation providing a library, continuing professiona ...
. Passing as advocate in 1836, he was in 1841 appointed librarian to the society and he held this post until his death. In 1843 he became lecturer on Scots law in
Marischal College, Aberdeen Marischal College ( ) is a large granite building on Broad Street in the centre of Aberdeen in north-east Scotland, and since 2011 has acted as the headquarters of Aberdeen City Council. However, the building was constructed for and is on long- ...
, and for forty-eight years was practically the sole teacher of law in the university of Aberdeen first, as holding this lectureship; next, after the union of King's and Marischal Colleges (1860–81), as 'substitute' for Professor Patrick Davidson, who held the chair of law at King's College, but never lectured. After Davidson's death in 1881, Grub became professor of law in the
University of Aberdeen The University of Aberdeen ( sco, University o' 'Aiberdeen; abbreviated as ''Aberd.'' in List of post-nominal letters (United Kingdom), post-nominals; gd, Oilthigh Obar Dheathain) is a public university, public research university in Aberdeen, Sc ...
. In 1856, he graduated A.M. at Aberdeen, and in 1864 he received the degree of LL.D. from his university, and on resigning the chair in 1891 he was presented by his former students and fellow-citizens with his portrait painted by Sir
George Reid Sir George Houston Reid, (25 February 1845 – 12 September 1918) was an Australian politician who led the Reid Government as the fourth Prime Minister of Australia from 1904 to 1905, having previously been Premier of New South Wales f ...
. By birth an inheritor of the Scottish non-juring tradition, he was himself an accomplished theologian. He had followed with enthusiasm the whole course of the
Oxford Movement The Oxford Movement was a movement of high church members of the Church of England which began in the 1830s and eventually developed into Anglo-Catholicism. The movement, whose original devotees were mostly associated with the University of O ...
; and in the congregation to which he belonged ( St John's Episcopal Church, Aberdeen) he had supported his clergyman, Patrick Cheyne, throughout a prosecution in regard to eucharistic doctrine, which had weighty consequences, for it led to the charge and prosecution of the bishop of Brechin,
Alexander Penrose Forbes Alexander Penrose Forbes (16 June 18178 October 1875) was a Scottish Episcopalian divine, born in Edinburgh. A leading cleric in the Scottish Episcopal Church, he was Bishop of Brechin from 1847 until his death in 1875. Biography He was the sec ...
, and the intervention of Pusey and Keble in defence of that prelate. It took some time to heal the sores occasioned by that controversy. There was at Aberdeen in the early 1830s a group of young men, all of them Aberdeen lawyers, all of them
episcopalian Anglicanism is a Western Christian tradition that has developed from the practices, liturgy, and identity of the Church of England following the English Reformation, in the context of the Protestant Reformation in Europe. It is one of the l ...
s, and all of them earnest students of history and antiquities
John Hill Burton John Hill Burton FRSE (22 August 1809 – 10 August 1881) was a Scottish advocate, historian and economist. The author of ''Life and Correspondence of David Hume'', he was secretary of the Scottish Prison Board (1854–77), and Historiograph ...
, Joseph Robertson (1810-1866), and John Stuart (1813-1877). With these Grub associated on equal terms. Like them he contributed to the ''Aberdeen Magazine'' (1831-2), and took part in a far more important undertaking, the formation of the
Spalding Club The Spalding Club was the name of three successive antiquarian and text publication societies founded in Aberdeen, which published scholarly editions of texts and archaeological studies relevant to the history of Aberdeenshire and its region. The ...
. For this club he edited (1840-2), in conjunction with Joseph Robertson, James Gordon's ''History of Scots Affairs,'' 3 vols. (1853), Thomas Innes's ''History of Scotland, Civil and Ecclesiastical'' (the ''Life of Thomas Innes'' which he contributed to this volume was reprinted in the edition of Innes's ''Critical Essays,'' published in the ''Historians of Scotland'' series), and (1869) the index volume of the ''Illustrations of the Antiquities of Aberdeen and Banff.'' In 1861, his own work, by which he is best known, ''An Ecclesiastical History of Scotland from the Introduction of Christianity to the Present Time'' (it closes with the death of Bishop Skinner on 15 April 1857), in four volumes, was published at Edinburgh, and at once stamped him as the foremost authority on the subject in Scotland. Clear and unaffected in style, this work is learned and exact, but it suffers somewhat from the fact that his extreme scrupulosity as to literal truth caused him to hold too severely in check the wit and liveliness which were so conspicuous and charming in his conversation. As an historian he was determined to be fair, albeit he is at no pains to conceal (what he was proud of) his enthusiastic toryism and his profound attachment to the
Scottish Episcopal Church The Scottish Episcopal Church ( gd, Eaglais Easbaigeach na h-Alba; sco, Scots Episcopal(ian) Kirk) is the ecclesiastical province of the Anglican Communion in Scotland. A continuation of the Church of Scotland as intended by King James VI, and ...
. In the preface, Grub acknowledges the help he had received from Joseph Robertson and Norval Clyne; he regrets that for the history of the Roman Catholic church after the Reformation he had not been able to obtain more accurate materials; and he says that the work had occupied him more than nine years. In spite of the more recent researches on the Celtic period of Scottish history, the book is by no means out of date; but it is unfortunate that no second edition of it was called for until Grub was too old to undertake the labour of preparing one. He had made notes for this which it is understood were lent to the Rev. W. Stephen, D.D., Dumbarton, for his ''History''. Grub contributed to ''
Chambers's Encyclopædia ''Chambers's Encyclopaedia'' was founded in 1859Chambers, W. & R"Concluding Notice"in ''Chambers's Encyclopaedia''. London: W. & R. Chambers, 1868, Vol. 10, pp. v–viii. by William Chambers (publisher), William and Robert Chambers (publisher ...
'' the articles ''Scotland'' and ''Church of Scotland;'' that on ''Scottish Literature'' in the earlier editions was also his, but failing health prevented him from undertaking its revision for the new edition. To the Aberdeen Philosophical Society, he contributed the ''Life of Bishop Elphinstone;'' ''The Life of Bishop Burnet, and his Character as a Historian and Biographer;'' ''Dr. James Beattie and his Friends;'' ''The Antiquities of Dunkeld;'' ''Froude's History and Mary, Queen of Scots;'' ''Elgin Cathedral;'' ''Review of the Evidence as to the Complicity of Queen Mary in the Murder of Darnley;'' and, in concert with his lifelong friend and companion, Norval Clyne, ''The Ecclesiastical and Baronial Antiquities of the Cathedral of Brechin and Castle of Edzell.'' An unpublished paper on
Henry Scougal Henry Scougal (1650–1678) was a Scottish theologian, minister and author. Henry Scougal was the second son of Patrick Scougal and Margaret Wemys. His father was Bishop of Aberdeen for more than 20 years. From his infancy, Scougal was raised ...
supplied materials for the ''Life'' of that author prefixed to the latest edition of Scougal's devotional treatise, ''The Life of God in the Soul of Man'' (Aberdeen, 1892).


Family

His wife, Ann Lyall, died many years before him, leaving him two sons, the Rev. George Grub, provost of St Ninian's Cathedral, Perth, and the Rev. Charles Grub, rector of St Mary's, Montrose.


Works

His '' Ecclesiastical History of Scotland'' (1861), written from the standpoint of an
Episcopalian Anglicanism is a Western Christian tradition that has developed from the practices, liturgy, and identity of the Church of England following the English Reformation, in the context of the Protestant Reformation in Europe. It is one of the l ...
, is dry, but concise, clear, fair-minded, and trustworthy. Grub also edited (along with Joseph Robertson) Gordon's '' Scots Affairs'' for the
Spalding Club The Spalding Club was the name of three successive antiquarian and text publication societies founded in Aberdeen, which published scholarly editions of texts and archaeological studies relevant to the history of Aberdeenshire and its region. The ...
, of which he was one of the founders.


References

;Attribution * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Grub, George 1812 births 1892 deaths 19th-century Scottish historians Scottish librarians Alumni of the University of Aberdeen Academics of the University of Aberdeen People from Aberdeen Scottish Episcopalians Scottish legal scholars