John Aikin

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Template:Short description Template:For Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox person John Aikin (15 January 1747 – 7 December 1822) was an English medical doctor and surgeon. Later in life he devoted himself wholly to biography and writing in periodicals.

Life

He was born at Kibworth Harcourt, Leicestershire, England, son of John Aikin, Unitarian divine, and received his elementary education at the Nonconformist academy at Warrington, where his father was a tutor. He studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh, and in London under William Hunter. He practised as a surgeon at Chester and Warrington. Finally, he went to Leiden in Holland, earned an M.D. in 1780, and in 1784 established himself as a doctor in Great Yarmouth.<ref name="EB1911">{{#if: |

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In 1792, one of his pamphlets having given offence, he moved to London, where he practised as a consulting physician. He lived in Church Street, Stoke Newington. However, he concerned himself more with the advocacy of liberty of conscience than with his professional duties, and he began at an early period to devote himself to literary pursuits, to which his contributions were incessant. When Richard Phillips founded The Monthly Magazine in 1796, Aikin was its first editor. In conjunction with his sister, Anna Laetitia Barbauld, he published a popular series of volumes entitled Evenings at Home (6 vols, 1792–1795), for elementary family reading, which were translated into almost every European language.<ref name="EB1911"/>

Works

File:Aikin, John – Essay on the application of natural history to poetry, 1777 – BEIC 8796231.jpg
Essay on the application of natural history to poetry, 1777

In 1798 Aikin retired altogether from medicine and devoted himself to literary undertakings such as his General Biography (10 vols, 1799–1815). His other work included Biographical Memoirs of Medicine in Great Britain (1780), The Arts of Life... described in a series of letters. For the instruction of young persons (1802, reprinted 1807), and The Lives of John Selden, Esq., and Archbishop Usher (1812).<ref name="EB1911"/><ref>[1] Template:Webarchive. London: Jarndyce, 2020.</ref>

Apart from editing The Monthly Magazine (1796–1807) and Dodsley's Annual Register (1811–1815),<ref>Template:Cite NIE</ref> Aikin produced a paper called The Athenaeum in 1807–1809, not to be confused with the well-known magazine The Athenaeum (1828–1921).<ref>Another earlier work: Template:Cite book</ref>

Family

Aikin had four children, three sons and a daughter.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The eldest son, Arthur, was a prominent scientist, and the youngest, Edmund, an architect.<ref>Template:Cite DNB</ref> The second son, Charles, was adopted by Aikin's sister, who had no children. Through Charles, Aikin was grandfather to the writer Anna Letitia Le Breton. His daughter Lucy was a biographer, who in 1823 published Memoir of John Aikin, M.D., with a selection of Miscellaneous Pieces, Biographical, Moral and Critical.<ref>Google Books. Retrieved 23 November 2020.</ref>

Bibliography

References

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Sources

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Further reading

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