James Bailey (classical scholar)

{{Short description|English classical scholar and schoolmaster}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2019}}

James Bailey (died 1864) was an English classical scholar and schoolmaster.

Life

He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge. He graduated B.A. 1814, M.A. 1823, and obtained the Browne medals for Greek ode and epigrams, and the members' prizes in 1815 and 1816.{{acad|BLY808J|Bailey, James}} He was for many years master of the Perse Grammar School, Cambridge, from which he retired on a pension.

In 1850 he received a further pension of £100 per annum from the queen, on the recommendation of Bishops Edward Maltby and John Kaye. Bailey died in London, 13 February 1864.

Works

Besides contributions to the Classical Journal, Bailey published:

  • 'An Annotated Edition of Dalzel's Analecta Græca Minora' (1835) (edition of work by Andrew Dalzel).
  • 'Passages from the Greek Comic Poets,' which had been translated into English by Richard Cumberland, Francis Fawkes, and Francis Wrangham, with notes (1840);
  • a work on the 'Origin and Nature of Hieroglyphics and the Greek inscription on the Rosetta Stone' (1816).

He is best known for his edition of 'Forcellini's Latin Dictionary,' 2 vols. (1826), in which he translated the Italian explanations into English, incorporated the appendices of Egidio Forcellini with the main work, and added an Auctarium of his own.

References

  • {{cite DNB|wstitle=Bailey, James}}

Notes

{{reflist}}

;Attribution

{{DNB|wstitle=Bailey, James}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Bailey, James}}

Category:Year of birth missing

Category:1864 deaths

Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge

Category:English classical scholars

Category:English male writers