John Jebb (1775-1833)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Jebb (7 September 1775 - 9 December 1833) was an Irish churchman and writer.

[edit] Biography

He was born in Drogheda and educated at the Free Grammar School, Derry and Trinity College Dublin. Ordained in 1799, he became curate in Mogorbane, County Tipperary in 1805 and archdeacon of Emly in 1801.

For his services in maintaining order in the parish during the disturbances that followed the 1822 famine, he was made Bishop of Limerick in that year. In 1827 he had a stroke and afterwards spent his time in various places in England, devoting himself to writing. He favoured the high church approach to ritual and is regarded as a forerunner of the Oxford movement. He died in East Hill, near Wandsworth, Surrey.

[edit] Works

  • Sermons (London, 1815)
  • Sacred Literature (1820)
  • Practical Theology (2 vols., 1830)
  • Biographical Memoir of William Phelan (1832)
  • His correspondence with Alexander Knox was edited by C. Forster (2 vols., 1834).

[edit] References

  • C. Forster, Life and Letters of John Jebb, London 1851
  • Anne Mozley, Letters of J. H, Newman, i. 440, 470, ib. 1890
  • DNB, xxix, 259-261.