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Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve

Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve
Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve edit.jpg
Born (1831-10-23)October 23, 1831
Charleston, South Carolina
Died January 9, 1924(1924-01-09) (aged 92)
Baltimore, Maryland
Nationality United States
Fields Classical philology
Institutions Johns Hopkins University
Alma mater Princeton University
Academic advisors Johannes Franz
Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl
Friedrich Wilhelm Schneidewin
Known for Founder of the American Journal of Philology
Signature

Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve (October 23, 1831 – January 9, 1924), was an American classical scholar.

He was born in Charleston, South Carolina to Emma Louisa Lanneau and Benjamin Gildersleeve (1791–1875). His father was a Presbyterian evangelist, and editor of the Charleston Christian Observer from 1826 to 1845, of the Richmond (VA) Watchman and Observer from 1845 to 1856, and of The Central Presbyterian from 1856 to 1860. He graduated from Princeton in 1849 at the age of eighteen, and went on to study under Johannes Franz in Berlin, under Friedrich Ritschl at Bonn and under Schneidewin at Göttingen, where he received his doctor's degree in 1853. From 1856 to 1876 he was professor of Greek at the University of Virginia, holding the chair of Latin also from 1861 to 1866. He married September 18, 1866 in Middlebury, Virginia to Eliza Fisher Colston.

After service for the Confederate States Army in the American Civil War, during which Gildersleeve was shot in the leg, he returned to the University of Virginia. Ten years later, he accepted an offer from Daniel Coit Gilman of a position at Johns Hopkins University.

In 1880, the American Journal of Philology, a quarterly published by the Johns Hopkins University, was established under his editorial charge, and his strong personality was expressed in the department of the Journal headed "Brief Report" or "Lanx Satura," and in the earliest years of its publication every tiny detail was in his hands. His style in it, as elsewhere, is in striking contrast to that of the typical classical scholar, and accords with his conviction that the true aim of scholarship is "that which is." He published a Latin Grammar (1867; revised with the co-operation of Gonzalez B. Lodge, 1895 and 1899; reprinted 1997 with a bibliography of twentieth-century work on the subject) and a Latin Series for use in secondary schools (1875), both marked by lucidity of order and mastery of grammatical theory and methods. His edition of Persius (1875) is of great value.


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