Clement Mansfield Ingleby

Clement Mansfield Ingleby ( born October 29, 1823 in Edgbaston, Birmingham City today, † October 5, 1886 ) was an English literary scholar.

Clement Mansfield Ingleby ( pron. inngl'bi ), son of a respected administrator's, studied at Cambridge University, Mathematics and Philosophy, 1855-58 was professor of logic and metaphysics at the Midland Institute of his native city and in 1870 as secretary and later as Vice President of the Royal Society of Literature appointed in London, where he died on 5 October 1886.

Ingleby wrote as one of the major English Shakespeare scholar not only many contributions in the critical revues, but also a number of valuable books:

  • The Shakespeare fabrications (1859 )
  • A complete View of the Shakespeare controversy (1861 )
  • The still lion, an essay towards the restoration of Shakespeare 's text (1867 )
  • What Thomas Lodge an actor? (1867 )
  • Shakespeare's century of prayse (1874 )
  • Shakespeare's allusion - books ( 1874)
  • Shakespeare hermeneutics (1875 )
  • Shakespeare, the man and the book (1877 )
  • Occasional papers on Shakespeare ( 1881)

Ingleby was also a curator of Shakespeare's birthplace, as well as an active member of the New Shakespeare Society. The philosophical literature he enriched by the works of: Outlines of theoretical logic (1856 ), An introduction to metaphysics (1869 ) and The revival of philosophy at Cambridge (1870 ).

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  • Critic
  • Shakespeare scholar
  • Philosopher (19th Century )
  • University teachers (Cambridge)
  • English
  • Briton
  • Born in 1823
  • Died in 1886
  • Man
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