2015-01-27

‎Not proofread: Created page with "<section begin="s1"/>1852-1854 travelled in Peru and the forests of the eastern Andes. He visited South America again in 1860-1861, in order to arrange for the introduction of..."

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<noinclude><pagequality level="1" user="Slowking4" /><div class="pagetext">{{rh|{{x-larger| }}|{{x-larger|{{uc|MARKHAM, G.—MARKIRCH}}}}|{{x-larger|735}}}}<!-- replace "Foo" and "Bar" with the header from the page, delete and input page numbers are appropriate -->

</noinclude><section begin="s1"/>1852-1854 travelled in Peru and the forests of the eastern Andes.

He visited South America again in 1860-1861, in order to arrange

for the introduction of the cinchona plant into India, a service

of the highest value to humanity. In 1865-1866 he visited

Ceylon and India, to inspect and report upon the Tinnevelly

pearl-fishery and the cinchona plantations. On the Abyssinian

expedition of 1867-68 he served as geographer, and

was present at the storming of Magdala. In 187.4 he

accompanied the Arctic expedition under Sir George Nares

as far as Greenland. In later years Sir Clements Markham

travelled extensively in western Asia and the United States.

In 1855 he became a clerk in the Board of Control. From

1867-1877 he was in charge of the geographical department

of the Indian Office. He was secretary to the Hakluyt

Society from 1858-1887, and became its president in 1890.

From 1863-1888 he acted as secretary to the Royal Geographical

Society, and on his retirement received the society's

gold medal for his distinguished services to geography. He

was elected president of the same society in 1893, and retained

office for the unprecedented period of twelve years, taking an

active share in the work of the society and in increasing its usefulness

in various directions. It was almost entirely due to his

exertions that funds were obtained for the National Antarctic

Expedition under Captain Robert Scott, which left England in

the summer of 1901. Sir Clements Markham was elected F.R.S.

in 1873; was created C.B. in 1871, and K.C.B. in 1896; became

an honorary member of the principal geographical societies;

and was president of the International Geographical Congress

which met in London in 1895.

Sir Clements Markham conducted the Geographical Magazine

from 1872-1878, when it became merged in the Proceedings of the

Royal Geographical Society. Among his other publications may be

mentioned the following: Franklin's Footsneps (1852); Cuzco and

Lima (1856); Travels in Peru and India (1862); A Quichua Grammar

and Dictionary (1863); Spanish Irrigation (1867); A History of the

Abyssinian Expedition (1869); A Life of the Great-Lord Fairfax

(1870); Ollanta, a Quichua Drama (1871); Memoir on the Indian

Surveys (1871; 2nd ed., 1878); General Sketch of the History of Persia

(1832); The Threshold of the Unknown Region (1874, 4 editions);

A emoir of the Countess of Chinchon, (1875); Missions to Thibet,

(1877; 2nd ed., 1879); Memoir of the Indian Surveys; Peruvian

Bark (1880); Peru (1880); The War between Chili and Peru (1879-81;

3rd ed., 1883); The Sea Fathers (1885); The Fighting Veres

(1888); Paladins of King Edwin (1896); Life of John Davis the

Navigator (1889); a Life of Richard III. (1906), in which he maintained

that the king was not guilty of the murder of the two princes

in the Tower; also lives of Admiral Fairfax, Admiral John Markham,

Columbus and Major Rennel; a History of Peru; editions with

introductions of twenty works for the Hakluyt Society, of which

fourteen were also translations; about seventy papers in the Royal

Geographical Society's Journal; the Reports on the 'Moral and

Material Progress of India for 1871-1872 and 1872-1873; Memoir

of Sir John Harington for the Roxburghe Club (1880); the Peruvian

chapters for J. Winsor's History of America, and the chapters on

discovery and surveying for Clowes's History of the Navy.

<section end="s1"/>

<section begin="s2"/>'''MARKHAM, GERVASE''' (or JERVIS) (1568?-1637), English

poet and miscellaneous writer, third son of Sir Robert Markham

of Cotham, Nottinghamshire, was born probably in 1568. He

was a soldier of fortune in the Low Countries, and later Was a

captain under the earl of Essex's command in Ireland. He was

acquainted with Latin and several modern languages, and had

an exhaustive 'practical acquaintance with the arts of forestry

and agriculture. He was a noted horse-breeder, and is said

to have imported the first Arab. Very little is known of the

events of his life. The story of the murderous quarrel between

Gervase Markham and Sir John Holles related in the Biographia

Britannica (s.v. Holles) has been generally connected with him,

but in the Dictionary of National Biography, Sir Clements R.

Markham, a descendant from the same family, refers it to another

contemporary of the same name, whose monument is still to be

seen in Laneham church. Gervase Markham was buried at

St Giles's, Cripplegate, London, on the 3rd of February 1637.

He was a voluminous writer on many subjects, but he repeated

himself considerably in his works, sometimes reprinting the same

books under other titles. His booksellers procured a declaration

from him in 1617 that he would produce no more on certain topics.

735

Markham's writings include: The Teares of the Beloved (1600)

and Marie Magdalene's Teares (1601) long and rather commonplace

poems on the'Passion and Resurrection of Christ, both reprinted

y Dr A. B. Grosart in the Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library

(1871); The most Honorable Tragedy of Sir Richard Grinvile (1595),

reprinted (1871) by Professor E. Arber, a prolix and euphuistic poem

in eight-lined stanzas which was no doubt in Tennyson's mind when

he wrote his stirring ballad; The Poem of Poems, or Syon's Muse

(1595), dedicated to Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Philip Sidney;

Devoreux, Vertues Teares (1597). Herod and Antipater, a Tragedy

(1622) was written in conjunction with William Sampson, and with

Henry Machin he wrote a comedy called The Dumbe Knight (1608).

A Discourse og H orsemanshippe (1593) was followed by other popular

treatises on horsemanship and farriery. Honour in his Perfection

(1624) is in praise of the earls of Oxford, Southampton and Essex,

and the .S'ouldier's Accidence (1625) turns his military experiences

to account. He edited juliana Berners's Bake of Saint Albans

under the title of The Gentleman's Academie (1595), and produced

numerous books on husbandry, many of which are catalogued in

Lowndes's Bibliographer's Manual (Bohn's ed., 1857-1864).

<section end="s2"/>

<section begin="s3"/>'''MARKHAM, MRS''', the pseudonym of Elizabeth 'Penrose

(1780-1837), English writer, daughter of Edmund Cartwright

the inventor of the power-loom. She was born at her father's

rectory at Goadby Marwood, Leicestershire, on the 3rd of August

1780. In 1804 she married the Rev. John Penrose, a country

clergyman in Lincolnshire and a voluminous theological writer.

During her girlhood Mrs Penrose had frequently stayed with

relatives at Markham, a village in Nottinghamshire, and from

this place she took the nom de plume of “ Mrs Markham, ” under

which she gained celebrity as a writer of history and other books

for the young. The best known of her books was A History of

England from the First Invasion by the Romans to the End of the

Reign of George III. (1823), which went through numerous

editions. In 1828 she published a History of France. Both

these works enjoyed a wide popularity in America as well as in

England. The distinctive characteristic of “ Mrs Markham's ”

histories was the elimination of all the “ horrors ” of history,

and of the complications of modern party politics, as being unsuitable

for the youthful mind; and the addition to each chapter

of “Conversations” between a fictitious group consisting of

teacher and pupils bearing upon the subject matter. Her less

well-known works were Amusements of Westernheath, or Moral

Stories for Children (2 vols., 1824); A Visit to the Zoological

Gardens (1829); two volumes of stories entitled The New Children's

Friend (1832); Historical Conversations for Young People

(1836); Sermons for Children (1837). Mrs Markham died at

Lincoln on the 24th of January 1837.

See Samuel Smiles, A Publisher and his Friends (2 vols., London,

1891); G. C. Boase and W. P. Courtney, Bibliotheca Cornubiensis

(3 vols., London, 1874-1882).

<section end="s3"/>

<section begin="s4"/>'''MARKHAM, WILLIAM''' (1719-1807), archbishop of York, was

educated at Westminster and at Christ Church, Oxford. 'He

was one of the best scholars of his day, and attained to the headship

of his old school and college in 1753 and 1767 respectively.

He held from time to time a number of livings, and in 1771 was

made bishop of Chester and tutor to George prince of Wales.

In 1777 he became archbishop of York, and also lord high

almoner and privy councillor. He was for some time a close

friend of Edmund Burke, but his strong championship of Warren

Hastings caused a breach. He was accused by Lord Chatham of

preaching pernicious doctrines, and was a victim of the Gordon

riots in 1780. He died in 1807.

<section end="s4"/>

<section begin="s6"/>'''MARKHOR''' (“snake-eater ”), the Pushtu name of a large

Himalayan wild goat (Capra falconer), characterized by its

spirally twisted horns, and long shaggy winter coat. From the

Pir-Panjal range of Kashmir the markhor extends westwards

into Baltistan, Astor, Hunza, Afghanistan and the trans-Indus

ranges of the Punjab. The twist of the horns varies to a great

extent locally, the spiral being most open and Corkscrew-like

in the typical Astor animal, and closest and most screw-like

in the race (C. falconer jerdoni) inhabiting the Suleiman and

adjacent ranges.

<section end="s6"/>

<section begin="s8"/>'''MARKIRCH''' (French, Ste-Marie-aux-Mines), a town of

Germany, in Upper Alsace, prettily situated in the valley of the Leber, an affluent of the Rhine, near the French frontier. Pop. (1900), 12,37 2. The once productive silver, copper and lead<section end="s8"/><noinclude><references/></div></noinclude>

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