Hugh Murray (geographer)

Hugh Murray (1779–1846) was a Scottish geographer.

Life

He was the younger son of Matthew Murray (1735–1791), minister of North Berwick, and grandson of George Murray (d. 1757), who had held the same post. His elder brother, George (1772–1822), was also minister of North Berwick from 1795 till his death. His mother was daughter of John Hill, minister of St. Andrews, and sister of Henry David Hill, professor at St. Andrews.[1]

Murray entered the Edinburgh excise office as a clerk. On 22 January 1816 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. He was for a time editor of the Scots Magazine, and was a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society of London. His connection with Archibald Constable's Edinburgh Gazetteer caused him to figure in the Tory squib, written by James Hogg and others,[2] called Translation from an Ancient Chaldee MS., which appeared in Blackwood's Magazine for October 1817.[1]

Murray died after a short illness, while on a visit to London, in Wardrobe Place, Doctors' Commons, on 4 March 1846.[1]

Works

Murray published The Swiss Emigrants, a tale (anon.), in 1804; two philosophical treatises (The Morality of Fiction, 1805, and Enquiries respecting the Character of Nations, 1808); and another romance, Corasmin, or the Minister, in 1814.[1]

Encyclopædia of Geography

Voyage of Hanno the Navigator, from the Encyclopedia of Geography

Murray's major work was the Encyclopædia of Geography, a Description of the Earth, physical, statistical, civil, and political (London, 1834). He wrote the geographical part; the other sections were astronomy (William Wallace), botany (William Jackson Hooker), geology (Robert Jameson) and zoology (William Swainson).[3] A supplement was published in 1843. The work contained 82 maps and over a thousand woodcuts. It was well received, and an American edition (1843) in three volumes was edited by Thomas Gamaliel Bradford.[1]

Books

Murray's other main publications included:[1]

After his death were published:[1]

Other works

To the Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Murray contributed, among other papers, one, in 1818, On the Ancient Geography of Central and Eastern Asia, with Illustrations derived from Recent Discoveries in the North of India. In 1817 he enlarged and completed John Leyden's Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa.’ Similar works by him on Asia (3 vols. Edinburgh, 1820) and North America (London, 1829) followed.[1]

Murray also contributed to the press, and in the Edinburgh Cabinet Library there appeared compilations by him on the history or geography of: the Polar Seas (1830), British India (1832), China (1836), British America (1839), Africa (1830), and The United States (1844). Some of these volumes had contributions on natural history, by Robert Jameson, Thomas Stewart Traill, James Nicol, and others.[1]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9  Norgate, Gerald le Grys (1894). "Murray, Hugh". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography. 39. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  2. James Hogg; John Gibson Lockhart; John Wilson (1817). Translation from an Ancient Chaldee Manuscript, Supposed to Have Been Written by Daniel. (Proof-sheets of the Satire by James Hogg, John G. Lockhart and John Wilson, which Appeared in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine for Oct. 1817). Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  3. Hugh Murray; William Wallace; Robert Jameson; Sir William Jackson Hooker; William Swainson; Thomas Gamaliel Bradford (1840). The Encyclopædia of Geography: Comprising a Complete Description of the Earth, Physical, Statistical, Civil, and Political ... Lea and Blanchard. p. 5. Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  4. Hugh Murray (1845). The Travels of Marco Polo. Harper & brothers.
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Norgate, Gerald le Grys (1894). "Murray, Hugh". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography. 39. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 

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