OBITUARIES, FOREIGN. 



645 



medical author ; died in London. He was 

 surgeon to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, and au- 

 thor of " New Mode of Treatment of Ulcers " 

 (London, 1837) ; " Operation for Lateral Cur- 

 vature of the Spine " (1841) ; " Venereal Dis- 

 ease" (1841); "Operative Surgery" (1850); 

 " Relative Merits of the Two Operations for 

 Stone" (1854); "Hysteria" (1867). 



Aug. 28. QUAGLIA, Cardinal ANGELO, a Ro- 

 man Catholic prelate ; died at Rome, aged 70 

 years. He was born at Corneto, August 28, 

 1802, educated in the College for the Propaga- 

 tion of the Faith, at Rome ; ordained a priest, 

 in 1828, promoted to the bishopric, in 1846 ; 

 was prefect of the congregation of bishops and 

 regular clergy, and on the 27th of September, 

 1861, was appointed a cardinal by Pio Nono. 



Aug. 29. BETHUNE, Very Rev. , D. D., 



Dean of Montreal, a venerable clergyman of 

 the Established Church in Canada ; died there, 

 aged 85 years. His ministry there had ex- 

 tended over a period of nearly half a cen- 

 tury. 



Aug. . ALDIS, C. J. B., M. D., member 

 of the Royal College of Surgeons, an eminent 



Ehysician and philanthropist; died in London. 

 Q early life he was associated with the Earl 

 of Shaftesbury in improving the condition of 

 the dwellings of the poor in the worst parts 

 of Westminster, He held appointments, the 

 statement of which filled nearly half a column 

 of medical directories. 



Aug. . BEAUGE ET DE MELGUEIL, Madame 

 ULKICH, lady of honor to Marie Antoinette ; 

 died in Paris, aged 102 years. 



Aug. . TEENCH, WILLIAM STETJAET, an 

 Irish manager of estates, and author ; died in 

 Kings County, Ireland, aged 64 years. He 

 was born, November 16, 1808, at Bellegrove, 

 Queens County, educated at the College Ar- 

 magh, and took his degree at Trinity College, 

 Dublin. Having held an agency over estates 

 in County Monaghan, he was, in December, 

 1849, appointed agent over the estates of the 

 Marquis of Lansdowne, County Kerry. In 

 1851 he was appointed over those of the Mar- 

 quis of Bath, County Monaghan, and in 1856 

 over Lord Digby's estates in Kings County, 

 holding the head supervision of the three lat- 

 ter estates until his death. In 1841 he ob- 

 tained the gold medal of the Royal Agricultu- 

 ral Society of Ireland for " the best report on 

 the largest quantity of land reclaimed in Ire- 

 land," which report was published in the 

 "Transactions" of the Society. In 1869 he 

 published his " Realities of Irish Life," giving 

 an account of his college days, and of the sev- 

 eral agencies to which he was appointed, and 

 the dangers and difficulties of the situations, 

 etc. In 1871 he published the novel "lerne." 

 Aug. . WEST, Rev. J. J., a clergyman of 

 the Established Church, England: died in 

 London, aged 67 years. He was Rector of 

 Winchelsea Parish, Sussex, for more than forty 

 years. He was the representative man of the 

 Calvinistic wing of the Established Church, 



and often, in his sermons, handled his Armin- 

 ian brethren with great severity. 



Sept. 2. GBUNDTVIG, NICOLAS, Bishop of 

 the Danish Lutheran Church ; died in Copen- 

 hagen, aged 89 years. He was a peculiar and 

 imposing personage, a man of great and versa- 

 tile gifts, an ardent patriot, and an enthusias- 

 tic Old Lutheran. As preacher, poet, and his- 

 torian, his fame was widely known, and his 

 wonderful power over the masses made a 

 most decided impression upon the Church in 

 the North of Europe. His numerous followers, 

 who, owing to some of his peculiar views, 

 constituted something of a sect and at one 

 time held conventicles, regarded him as "the 

 Luther of the North." Unpopular with the 

 clergy on account of his orthodoxy, he was 

 called by the King to the Church of the Re- 

 deemer in Copenhagen, and was the first to 

 stem the tide of German rationalism which 

 had been sweeping over the national Church. 

 He was so ultra-national and so intensely anti- 

 Germanic that lie at one time proposed to 

 banish from the country all German poetry, 

 philosophy, history, and geology; and even 

 the Symbolical Books, as the product of Ger- 

 man authorship. His funeral was of an im- 

 posing character, and was attended by an im- 

 mense concourse of people, composed of the 

 clergy en masse, headed by the renowned Bish- 

 op Martensen and Prof. Dr. Clausen, the 

 students, all the personages of high rank in 

 Copenhagen, and large numbers of his ad- 

 herents from all parts of the kingdom. A 

 noticeable feature of the obsequies was the 

 singing of the audience. There had been dis- 

 tributed in the church a collection of fourteen 

 hymns of Grundtvig's own composition, all of 

 which were sung with great enthusiasm by the 

 vast assemblage of mourners. 



Sept. 23. HOHENLOHE-LANGENBEEG, ANNE 

 FEODOEOWNA ATTGTJSTE CHAELOTTE WILHEL- 

 MINA, Dowager-Princess of; died in Germany, 

 aged 65 years. She was a daughter of the 

 Duchess of Kent by her first husband, the 

 Prince of Leiningen, and thus half-sister to 

 Queen Victoria. She had married Ernest 

 Christian, Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenberg, 

 in February, 1828, and since his death, in 1860, 

 has been dowager-princess. She leaves five 

 children, three sons and two daughters. Her 

 second son, Hermann Ernest, is the present 

 Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenberg, and a major- 

 general in the Baden service. 



Sept. 26. MAETINETTE, PHILIP, a celebrated 

 acrobat and gymnast, long associated with the 

 Ravel Troupe ; died in New York. 



Sept. . ANDEESON, Rev. WILLIAM, D. D., 

 an eminent preacher of Glasgow ; died in that 

 city. He was a man of great originality and 

 rare liberality. Though of great age, he ac- 

 quired the Italian language very late in life. 

 At the time of his death he was engaged in 

 translating Sarpe's History. He held the 

 pastorate of a United Presbyterian church in 

 Glasgow for a period of over fifty years, and 



