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・ Josiah Rees
・ Josiah Roberts
・ Josiah Royce
・ Josiah Royce bibliography
・ Josiah S. Carberry
・ Josiah S. Johnston
・ Josiah S. Little
・ Josiah Sandford Brigham
・ Josiah Scott
・ Josiah Scott House
・ Josiah Seton
・ Josiah Sleeper
・ Josiah Smith
・ Josiah Conder
・ Josiah Conder (architect)
Josiah Conder (editor and author)
・ Josiah Coolidge House
・ Josiah Cotton
・ Josiah Coulthurst
・ Josiah Court
・ Josiah Cowles House
・ Josiah Crudup
・ Josiah Crudup House
・ Josiah Crump
・ Josiah D. Coleman
・ Josiah Day House
・ Josiah Dean
・ Josiah Dennis House
・ Josiah Dent
・ Josiah Diston


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Josiah Conder (editor and author) : ウィキペディア英語版
Josiah Conder (editor and author)

Josiah Conder (17 September 1789 – 27 December 1855), correspondent of Robert Southey and well-connected to Romantic authors of his day, was editor of the British literary magazine ''The Eclectic Review'', the Nonconformist and abolitionist newspaper ''The Patriot'', the author of romantic verses, poetry, and many popular hymns that survive to this day. His most ambitious non-fiction work was the thirty-volume worldwide geographical tome ''The Modern Traveller''; and his best-selling compilation book ''The Congregational Hymn Book''. Conder was a prominent London Congregationalist, an abolitionist, and took an active part in seeking to repeal British anti-Jewish laws.
==Early life==
The fourth son of Thomas Conder, an active Nonconformist who worked in the City of London as an engraver and bookseller, Josiah was born on 17 September 1789 at his father's bookshop in Falcon Street. His grandfather was Dr John Conder, a Dissenting minister and President of Homerton College and his uncle was James Conder the coin collector.
In his infancy, Josiah lost the vision in one eye due to smallpox. He was sent a few miles north of the City of London to the village of Hackney, for electrical treatment, a technique believed to be able to prevent the disease from spreading to also cause blindness in his other eye. He recovered, and continued to be educated at a dissenting academy in Hackney village, under the tutorship of the Reverend Mr. Palmer.
At the age of ten his first essay were published in 'The Monthly Preceptor', and on reaching fifteen, he began work as an assistant in his family's City bookshop. On reaching the age of 21 (in 1811), he took over the family business. A short time later, Josiah married Joan Elizabeth Thomas ('Eliza Thomas'), one of his circle of friends with whom he had initially formed a literary association in 1810 to jointly contribute to the book, ''The Associate Minstrels''. She continued to write after her marriage, for example contributing two short narratives 'On the Ausonia Butterfly flying over the Summit of Mont Blanc' and 'The Air Orchis' to The Christian Keepsake in 1837.

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