Edinburgh Review

The Edinburgh Review was one of the most influential magazines of the 19th century. It took for its motto "judex damnatur ubi nocens absolvitur" ("The judge is condemned when the guilty is acquitted.") from Publilius Syrus. Started in 1802 by Francis Jeffrey, Sydney Smith and Henry Brougham it was published by Archibald Constable in quarterly issues until 1929. The magazine began as a literary and political review and under its first editor, Francis Jeffrey the magazine was a strong supporter of the Whig party, Laissez-faire politics and regularly called for political reform. Its main rival was The Quarterly Review which supported the Torys. The magazine was also noted for its attacks on the "Lake Poets" particularly William Wordsworth. The Edinburgh Review was restarted in the 1960s and is still issued. An earlier short-lived magazine with a similar title and purpose Edinburgh Magazine and Review (1773 - 1776) was published monthly but has no other connection to the later version.

Notable contributors

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
west bromwich west by election, 2000
william alexander macdonald
astm international
general motors ev1
sean maher
potto
glasgow anniesland by election, 2000
the knights of byzantium (buffy the vampire slayer)
primus canada
beam gun
kay summersby
marque
buckhurst hill
stoner music
foekje dillema
life like cellular automaton
society for the diffusion of useful knowledge
oresund region
falkirk west by election, 2000
first viennese school
boonesborough, kentucky
guinness book of british hit singles
julie chen
julius peppers
kentucky river authority
national technology transfer and advancement act
representation of a lie superalgebra
john andrew davidson
mark eaton (basketball player)
live at benaroya hall: october 22, 2003
intergovernmental affairs secretariat (canada)
denis coderre
golden song sparrow
list of monarchs of mercia
ron glass
triarchic theory of intelligence
php extension and application repository
peter m. bowers
ibm 1410
albedo (disambiguation)
titular bishop
james fisher (manitoba politician)
hyangak
examples of quantum field theory models