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Lightfoot, John, 1735-1788

LC control no.n 90632183
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingLightfoot, John, 1735-1788
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Associated placeOxford (England)
Birth date1735-12-09
Death date1788-02-21
Place of birthNewent (England)
Place of deathUxbridge (London, England)
Field of activityBotany Pastoral care Preaching Teaching
AffiliationChurch of England Royal Society (Great Britain) Pembroke College (University of Oxford)
Profession or occupationClergy Botanists Teachers
Found inBowden, J.K. John Lightfoot, his work and travels, 1989: t.p. (John Lightfoot) pref. (b. 1735; d. 1788)
Flora Scotica, or, A systematic arrangement in the Linnaean method of the native plants of Scotland and the Hebrides, 1777: t.p. (by John Lightfoot, A.M. Rector of Gotham in Notthinghamshire, and chaplain to the Duchess Dowager of Portland)
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online, viewed 17 October 2016 (Lightfoot, John (1735-1788), Church of England clergyman and naturalist; born 9 December 1735 at Newent in Gloucestershire; married on 10 November 1780 to Matilda Raynes (b. 1759/60); Lightfoot devoted his life to the study of natural history, focusing on the British flora, ornithology, and conchology; educated at the Crypt School in Gloucester, he entered Pembroke College, Oxford, in 1753 to study for the church; he obtained his BA in 1756; his first appointment was as perpetual curate and lecturer at Colnbrook, Middlesex; he lived in the Lecturer's House in Uxbridge for the rest of his life; he also held the living of Shalden, near Alton, in Hampshire (1765-77); he became chaplain to the dowager duchess of Portland, Margaret Cavendish-Bentinck, in 1767, soon after proceeding MA; Lightfoot wrote Flora Scotica, published 22 September 1777; after the dowager duchess of Portland died in 1785 Lightfoot was commissioned to compile a catalogue of the Portland Museum; he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1781; Lightfoot died 21 February 1788)
Associated languageeng