Alexander Robertson MacEwen

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Alexander Robertson MacEwen
From the frontispiece portrait of his biography: Life and times of Alexander Robertson MacEwen, D.D
From the frontispiece portrait of his biography: Life and times of Alexander Robertson MacEwen, D.D
Born(1856-05-14)14 May 1856
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died26 November 1916(1916-11-26) (aged 60)
Edinburgh, Scotland
Pen nameA. R. MacEwen
Occupation
  • Writer
  • biographer
  • teacher
  • minister
  • professor
  • classicist
NationalityScottish
GenreNon-fiction, biography, history, classics, theology
SpouseMargaret Jane Begg
Childrentwo sons
MacEwen's grave, Dean Cemetery

Alexander R. MacEwen (1851–1916) was Scottish writer, minister, professor and Moderator of the United Free Church of Scotland.

Life

He was born on 14 May 1856 at

U.P. College, Edinburgh (1877–80). On 29 January 1885, he married Margaret Jane Begg of Moffat, and they had two sons. He travelled widely and visited Greece in 1883 and journeyed through Sinai and Palestine in 1892, writing many letters home about his experiences.[1]

He died in Edinburgh on 26 November 1916 and was buried with his wife, Margaret Jane Begg (d.1929), on the eastern corner of the south-west section of Dean Cemetery. The grave is marked by a simple stone cross.

Career

From his biography: Life and times of Alexander Robertson MacEwen, D.D

Official appointments

  • Chairman of Moffat School Board;
  • Member of Glasgow School Board;
  • Governor of Hutcheson's Schools;
  • Secretary of Christian Unity Association;
  • President of Scottish History Society;
  • director of other trusts and societies; educational, charitable, and religious

Publications

Classical

  • The Origin and Growth of the Roman Satiric Poetry. [Arnold Prize]. Oxford: T. Shrimpton and Son, 1877.
  • St Jerome
    , 1878;
  • The Eastern Church in Greece, 1890;
  • A History of the Church in Scotland. Vols. I, II. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1913–1918.

Biographies

Sermons and lectures

Sources

References

  1. ^ David S. Cairns, Life and times of Alexander Robertson MacEwen, D.D. p.xii & ch.VIII, pp. 126–162.
  2. ^ "Who's Who in Glasgow in 1909: GEORGE GILBERT RAMSAY". gdl.cdlr.strath.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  3. ^ A Roll of the Graduates of the University of Glasgow, from 1727 to 1897
  4. ^ According to his entry in The Fasti of the United Free Church of Scotland. This may be a reference to Douglas College in New Westminster.
  5. ^ These published lectures are listed in Glasgow University library catalogue.

External links