Charles Chorley
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Charles Chorley (c. 1810–1874) was an English journalist, man of letters and translator from several languages.


Life

Chorley was born in
Taunton Taunton () is the county town of Somerset, England, with a 2011 population of 69,570. Its thousand-year history includes a 10th-century monastic foundation, Taunton Castle, which later became a priory. The Normans built a castle owned by the ...
, Somerset about 1810, the son of Lt Paymaster John Chorley of the 1st Somerset Militia (died February 1839). Most of his life was spent at
Truro Truro (; kw, Truru) is a cathedral city and civil parish in Cornwall, England. It is Cornwall's county town, sole city and centre for administration, leisure and retail trading. Its population was 18,766 in the 2011 census. People of Truro ...
, where he acted for 30 years as sub-editor and reporter of the ''
Royal Cornwall Gazette The media in Cornwall has a long and distinct history. The county has a wide range of different types and quality of media. History Timeline Background Cornwall's geography, a long, narrowing peninsula, pointing into the Atlantic, made travel ...
'', an old-established Tory paper. He held also the posts of secretary to the Truro Public Rooms Company, and sub-manager of the Truro Savings Bank. For eleven years (1863–1874) he edited the ''Journal of the
Royal Institution of Cornwall The Royal Institution of Cornwall (RIC) is a Learned society in Truro, Cornwall, United Kingdom. It was founded in Truro on 5 February 1818 as the Cornwall Literary and Philosophical Institution. The Institution was one of the earliest of seve ...
'', and was involved in managing the society. He died at Lemon Street, Truro, on 22 June 1874, aged 64.


Writings

Chorley was a man of wide scholarship, versed in the classics and several modern languages, and of good classical taste. It was his custom to print for the private gratification of his friends, to whom alone the initials "C. C." revealed the authorship, small volumes of translations from dead and living languages. The most important were versions of
George Buchanan George Buchanan ( gd, Seòras Bochanan; February 1506 – 28 September 1582) was a Scottish historian and humanist scholar. According to historian Keith Brown, Buchanan was "the most profound intellectual sixteenth century Scotland produced." ...
's tragedies of ''Jephtha, or the Vow'', and ''The Baptist, or Calumny'', and two volumes of miscellaneous renderings from the German, Italian, Spanish, and French, as well as from the Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. The titles of all these works appear in the pages of the ''Bibliotheca Cornubiensis''. When the council of the Royal Institution of Cornwall proposed to bring out a volume under that title, the preparatory lists of the publications known to them were drawn up by Chorley and Thomas Quiller Couch. The scheme did not propose to go beyond works relating to the topography or the history of the county, and even within that limited area, the design was beyond the power of persons not acquainted with the treasures of the British Museum.


References

;Attribution


Sources

*''Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall'', October 1874, pp. iii–iv, vii * G. C. Boase and W. P. Courtney's ''Bibliotheca Cornubiensis'', i. 69; iii. 1009 and 1119. * {{DEFAULTSORT:Chorley, Charles 1810 births 1874 deaths People from Taunton English male journalists English bibliographers 19th-century British journalists 19th-century English male writers Writers from Cornwall