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GIBEON, a town famous in Old Testament history, known under the name of El Jib, situated 5 miles north-west of Jerusalem. It is now a small village standing on an isolated hill above a flat corn valley. The famous spring (2 Sam. ii. 13) comes out from under a cliff on the south-east side of the hill, and the water runs to a reservoir lower down. The sides of the hill are rocky, and remarkable for the regular stratification of the limestone, which gives the hill at a distance the appearance of being stepped. Scattered olive groves surround the place. The name is derived from the Hebrew root gabah, signifying "prominence," and there are throughout Palestine mahy ancient sites situate on rocky knolls which receive names (e.g., Gibeah, Geba, Gabe, Gaba-nearly all represented by the present Jeba) derived from this same root.

GIBRALTAR, a British fortress and town in the south of Spain, occupying a grand peninsular headland, which stretches almost due south in a line with the eastern coast of the province of Andalusia, separating the Bay of Algeciras from the open sea of the Mediterranean, and commanding the strait by which the Mediterranean communicates with the Atlantic. Its latitude is 36° 6' 23" N. and its longitude 5° 20′ 55" W. The "rock," as the promontory is familiarly called, is about 2 miles in length, with a varying breadth of from 2 to 6 furlongs. Rising abruptly from the low sandy isthmus which connects it with the mainland to a height of 1200 feet, the main ridge continues south for about 1 miles, being separated by two transverse depressions, known respectively as the Northern and Southern Quebrada, into three pretty distinct summits-the Wolf's Crag or North Front, the Middle Hill or Signal Station (1255 feet high), and the Pan de Azucar or Sugar Loaf Hill, dominated by O'Hara's tower (1408 feet). This last sum. mit descends somewhat abruptly on the south to the Windmill Plateau, an almost level area about half a mile in length by a quarter in breadth, which, from a height of 400 feet above the sea, slopes south till it is only 300 feet above the sea, and then in its turn sinks abruptly for about 200 feet to the Europa Plateau, which, also sloping seaward, terminates in a cliff about 50 feet high. Towards the east or Mediterranean side the promontory presents as precipitous and inaccessible a front as towards the north, but towards the west the ascent is comparatively gradual though interrupted by longitudinal cliffs and ravines, and a considerable space of fairly level ground at the foot affords a site for the town.

The basement rock of Gibraltar is for the most part a greyish white or pale grey limestone, of compact and sometimes crystalline texture, arranged in beds, but in some places apparently amorphous. Above the limestone is a series of dark greyish blue shales with intercalated beds and bands of grit, sandstone, and limestone; and distributed here and there about the promontory are various limestone breccias, bone-breccias, and calcareous sandstones, as well as loose sand and debris. It is evident that the whole promontory has had an eventful geological history in comparatively recent periods. The limestone and the shales are both of Lower Jurassic age, but the rest of the formations are of much more ancient date. According to the researches of Professors Ramsay and Geikie ("Geology of Gibraltar," in the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, London, 1878), the oldest superficial accumulation is the unfossiliferous limestone breccia of Buena Vista, which must have been formed under somewhat severer climatic conditions than the present, and when the rock had a wider area of low ground at its base. This period was probably followed by one with a genial climate, during which the promontory, if indeed it was not rather an isthmus between Europe and Africa, was clothed with vegetation and inhabited by a rich mammalian fauna, whose remains are

still found in the Genista caves. Next there came a subsidence of a large proportion of the rock to the extent of 700 feet below the present level, the consequent erosion of ledges and platforms, and the formation of the calcareous sandstones which have incorporated shells of recent Mediterranean species. The process of depression was apparently interrupted by pauses. On its re-elevation, the land was again of greater extent than now; Africa and Europe were perhaps reunited, and the climate was probably genial. By a new depression the rock was brought into its present geographical relations.

Like most masses of limestone formation, the promontory of Gibraltar is boneycombed with caverns and subterrane ous passages, and the Genista cave, already incidentally mentioned, is only one of the many to which it owes the title of the Hill of Caves. A special interest attaches tc

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some of them for the palaeontological and archæological remains which they yielded to the explorations of Captain Brome between 1863 and 1868. St Michael's Cave, which is the most frequently visited by strangers, has its entrance about 1100 feet above the sea on the western face of the rock in the line of the Southern Quebrada. A rapid slope of earth gives admission to a hall 200 feet long by 70 feet high, the roof of which appears as if it were supported by massive stalactite pillars; and from this hall access is obtained to a series of four similar caves connected with each other by tortuous passages, the last cave being situated about 300 feet below the surface, and about 400 feet of travelling distance south by west from the entrance. The first of the four was called Victoria cave by its dis coverer Captain Brome, and the three others, being more closely associated, received the common name of Leonora's

caves.

"Nothing," says Captain Brome, "can exceed the | beauty of the stalactites; they form clusters of every imaginable shape-statuettes, pillars, foliages, figures. Even the American visitors have been compelled to acknowledge that, as regards beauty and picturesqueness, even the Mammoth Cave would not come near them." The mammalian remains of the Genista cave have been investigated by Mr Busk ("Quaternary Fauna of Gibraltar," in Trans. of Zool. Soc., vol. x. p. 2, 1877), and found to comprise specimens of a bear, probably Ursus fossilis of Goldfuss; a hyena, probably H. crocuta or spelaa; various species of cats, from the size of a leopard to that of a wild cat; a rhinoceros similar to the species found in the valley of the Thames; two forms of ibex; and the hare and the rabbit. No trace has been discovered of Rhinoceros tichorinus, of Ursus spelaus, or of the reindeer, and the only relic of the elephant as yet registered within the peninsula is a perfect specimen of the penultimate upper molar tooth of Elephas antiquus. For further details see James Smith of Jordanhill "On the geology of Gibraltar," in Quart. Journ. of Geol. Soc., vol. ii., and G. Busk and Hugh Falconer "On the Fossil Contents of the Genista Cave," in Quart. Journ. of Geol. Soc., vol. xxi., reprinted in Falconer's Paleontological Memoirs, London, 1868.

seems to suffer. Heavy dews and thick fogs occur in autumn, and are as disagreeable as they are unhealthy. In the early part of the present century Gibraltar was notori ously filthy and ill-drained, and epidemic diseases committed great ravages from time to time; but great improvements have been effected, especially through the sanitary com. mission instituted in 1865. The inhabitants were formerly dependent on the rainfall for most of their water supply the springs in the rock being both scanty and brackish; bu in 1869 an abundant source of fairly good water was found to exist under the sands of the North Front, and pump and conduits have been constructed for its distribution. In 1876 the quality of the water was reported to be de teriorating. Besides the private tanks, still numerous throughout the town, there are eight bomb-proof cisterns for rain-water, of a total capacity of 40,000 tons. The navy tank, for the supply of ships, holds from 9000 to 11,000 tons.

Gibraltar is emphatically a fortress, and in some respects its fortifications are unique. On the eastern side the rock needs no defence beyond its own precipitous cliffs, and in all other directions it has been rendered practically impregnable. Besides a sea-wall extending at intervals round the western base of the rock, and strengthened by curtains and bastions and three formidable forts, there are batteries in all available positions from the sea-wall up to the summit 1350 feet above the sea; and a remarkable series of galleries has been hewn out of the solid face of the rock towards the north and north-west. These galleries have an aggregate length of between 2 and 3 miles, and their breadth is sufficient to let a carriage pass. Port-holes are cut af intervals of 12 yards, so contrived that the gunners are safe from the shot of any possible assailants. At the end of one of the galleries hollowed out in a prominent part of the cliff is St George's Hall, 50 feet long by 35 feet wide, in which the governor was accustomed to give fêtes. Alterations, extensions, and improvements are continually taking place in the defensive system, and new guns of the most formidable sort are gradually displacing or supplementing the old-fashioned ordnance. The whole population of Gibraltar, whether civil or military, is subjected to certain stringent rules. For even a day's sojourn the alien must obtain a pass from the town-major, and if he wish to remain longer a consul or householder must become security for his good behaviour. Licences of residence are granted only for short periods-ten, fifteen, or twenty days-but they can be renewed if occasion require. Military officers may introduce a stranger for thirty days. A special permit is necessary if the visitor wishes to sketch.

To the voyager entering the straits the rock presents a bare and almost barren aspect, especially when the summer suns have dried up the verdure; but as he approaches he discovers a considerable clothing of vegetation, and closer acquaintance reveals the existence of an extensive flora. Here and there a grassy glen gives shelter to a group of trees, and the villas of the English residents are surrounded with luxuriant gardens and copses. Dr E. F. Kelaart in his Flora Calpensis (London, 1846) enumerates upwards of 400 flowering plants and ferns as indigenous to Gibraltar, and about fifty as introduced. Of the former a few appear to be species peculiar to the rock. White poplars, the cotton-tree, the pepper-tree or pimenta, the ilex, and the pine are the most noticeable of the larger trees; the bella-sombra (Phytolacca divica), introduced by General Don, the aloe, and the prickly pear are common; and on the eastern side of the rock the dwarf palm (Chamaerops humilis) covers large areas. Among the fruit trees, which, however, are cultivated rather for ornament than for profit, may be mentioned the almond, the olive, the orange, the lemon, the pomegranate, the fig, and the loquat. In January and February many portions of the rock present a charming sight from the profusion and beauty of the wild flowers. The fauna of Gibraltar is naturally poor,-rabbits, foxes, partridges, pigeons, and woodcocks being the principal 3pecies. The little Barbary apes, of which every schoolboy has heard, but which not every resident in Gibraltar has seen, are few in number, not more than twenty perhaps, and they usually inhabit the higher and eastern parts of the rock, except when they are driven towards the lower grounds by the cold winds from the north-east. They then do a little damage to the fruit trees; but they enjoy impunity as perfect as that of the storks in Holland or the ibis in Egypt. As to its climate Gibraltar belongs to the subtropical zone, with a dry summer and a rainy season in winter. More than half the rainfall of the year, which only amounts to about 28 or 30 inches, occurs in November, December, and January; and the three months of June, July, and August are hardly refreshed by a shower. The temperature is subject to frequent disturbances: from 93° to 87° is the highest reached (July), and 43° the lowest exchange; the court-house; the civil hospital; the (February), and the mean for the summer months is from revenue offices; and the garrison library, planned by Colonel 74° to 79°. In summer the heat is tempered by a sea-breeze Drinkwater in 1793. The library has excellent readingwhich blows from about 10 A.M. till shortly before sunset. rooms, and contains from 40,000 to 45,000 volumes. At Easterly winds or levanters are common from July to the north-east corner of the town stand the remains of the November, and during their prevalence every living creature | Moorish castle. Towards the south the lower grounds are

Though the town of Gibraltar may be said to date from the 14th century, it has preserved very little architectural evidence of its antiquity. Rebuilt on an enlarged and improved plan after its almost complete destruction during the great siege, it is still on the whole a mean-looking town, with narrow streets and lanes and an incongruous mixture of houses after the English and the Spanish types. As a proprietor may at any moment be called upon to give up his house and ground at the demand of the military authorities, he is naturally deterred from spending his money on sub stantial or sumptuous erections. The area of the town is about 100 acres. The public buildings comprise the cathedral of the Holy Trinity, a pour imitation of Moorish architecture; the governor's house, formerly a Franciscan monastery and still familiarly known as "The Convent "; the

occupied by the Grand Parade and the Alameda Gardens, laid out by General Don in 1814; and beyond these are the old convict establishment, the dockyard, and the newmole parade. Further south, at Rosia, is the naval hospital, erected in 1771.

Gibraltar has been a free port since the year 1705,—a distinction which it owes in part to the refusal of the emperor of Morocco to allow the export of materials for the fortifications unless his subjects obtained full liberty of trade. In the early part of the present century the commercial activity of the little colony was remarkably great. While the average value per annum of British manufactures exported to the rest of Spain during the ten years from 1831 to 1840 was less than £385,000, the corresponding average for Gibraltar was more than £486,000; and in the year 1810 the ratio of Spain and Gibraltar was £404,252 to £1,111,176. Since that date there has been comparatively little advance, the average annual value of all the British and colonial produce and manufactures for the ten years from 1868 to 1877 being £1,074,785. Besides the legitimate trade fostered by the demands of the garrison and the neighbouring cities of Spain, Gibraltar hus long had a large contraband traffic especially in tobacco and Manchester goods. Mainly carried on by Spaniards, it continued to thrive in spite of the exertions of the Spanish authorities, and is now kept down mainly by the action of British officials. About 1200 tons of tobacco are sold annually in the Jews' Market; no fewer than eleven houses import upwards of 1000 tons-annually; and its manufacture and manipulation give employment, it is said, to about 1550 persons. Fully two-thirds of the tobacco comes from Calcutta and other Indian ports. Wool, grain, and wax from Morocco, fruit, wine, oil, and other produce from Spain, are sent to Gibraltar for transhipment to England, France, Germany, Belgium, Holland, Portugal, America, ports in the Mediterranean, India, and China." As a port of call, the Bay of Gibraltar has recently increased in importance. Upwards of 5000 vessels enter the port annually, and of these more than half are propelled by steam. The average annual tonnage of the ships that entered between 1871 and 1875 was 2,069,508; and of this no less than 1,594,174 was British. Quarantine was established in 1830. By the shipping act of 1868 the governor was empowered to remove from the register any vessel guilty of a violation of the Spanish revenue laws discreditable to the British flag. In 1865 a duty was imposed on wines and spirits. Great commotion was caused among the mercantile population of Gibraltar in 1871 by a proposed customs ordinance, framed for the suppression of the smuggling. One of its chief provisions was that no tobacco should be exported or imported in vessels of less than 100 tons burden or in packets of less than 80 b.

The population of Gibraltar in 1840 was 15,554, of whom 11,313 were British subjects and 4241 aliens; and by 1850 it had increased to 15,823, with 3641 aliens. In 1860 the civil population, including foreigners visiting the garrison, amounted to 17,647; but the number of resident inhabitants was only 15,467. According to returns for 1872 the total population was 18,695 (8969 males and 9726 females), the aliens numbering 2241 and the military 6521. The death-rate of the civil population varies from 25 to 31 per thousand, but it is almost always exceeded by the birth-rate. During the five years 1871-1875 the average number of births per annum was 592-4, and of deaths 538-2. Besides the natives, who themselves are of various origin, there are always in the town considerable numbers of Spaniards, Portuguese, and Italians, as well as stray representatives of almost every nationality engaged in the trade of the Mediterranean. Though by the treaty of Utrecht it was specially bargained by Spain that "no leave shall be

given under any pretence whatever either to Jews or Moors to reside or have their dwelling in the town of Gibraltar," the native Jews by 1844 numbered no fewer than 1385. The greater part of the population is Roman Catholic, but full religious liberty is of course enjoyed. The church of the Holy Trinity was constituted to be a cathedral and bishop's see of the Church of England in 1843. The Wesleyans and the Presbyterians have places of worship. St Andrew's, the new Presbyterian church, was built by the Free Church of Scotland in 1854. A proposal for concomitant endowment of "church bodies for the Anglican and Roman Catholic communities" with the annual sum of £500 was made by the governor in 1876, but it was not sanctioned by parliament. An annual grant to this amount is made to both bodies, but the Government no longer keeps the cathedral in repair. The Roman Catholic bishop of Antinoe is vicar apostolic of Gibraltar.

Gibraltar was long an ill-managed and expensive colony; but its expenditure is now sometimes even less than its revenue. During the five years from 1871 to 1875 the average expenditure, increased by several unusual items, was £43,988; and the average income was £42,464. For 1877 the expenditure was £41,585, or £1739 more than the income. The chief sources of the revenue are the port and quarantine dues, the excise on the consumption of wines and spirits, and the ground and house rents,—the three departments yielding respectively on the average from 1871 to 1875 £11,011, £11,512, and £6,206. It is worthy of note that the ground and house rentals have increased from £5629 in 1871 to £7078 in 1875. Among the heavier items of outlay are the governor's salary, which amounts to £5000 per annum, and the judicial and ecclesiastical expenses, which were, on an average from 1871 to 1875, respectively £3909 and £1061. The total cost of the military establishment was, on the average of four years from 1869 to 1873, £315,454,-of which £250,340 was the average cost of the regular troops, £1610 for the jails, and £19,293 for the barracks. The convict establishment was abolished in 1875. At that date it contained 238 prisoners, who were managed on the associated system; and grievous complaints were made of the difficulty of maintaining satisfactory discipline.

graphers as Calpe or Alybe, the two names being probably corruptions History.-Gibraltar was known to the Greek and Roman geoof the same local (perhaps Phoenician) word. The eminence on the African coast near Ceuta which bears the modern English name of Apes' Hill was then designated Abyla; and Calpe and Abyla, at formed the renowned Pillars of Hercules (Herculis columnæ, least according to an ancient and widely current interpretation, Hpakλéous ora) which for centuries were the limits of enterprise to the seafaring peoples of the Mediterranean world. The strategic importance of the rock appears to have been first discovered by the Moors, who, when they crossed over from Africa in the 8th century, it was called Gebel Tarik or Tarik's Hill; and, though the name had a selected it as the site of a fortress. From their leader Tarik ibn Zeyad competitor in Gebel at Futah or Hill of the Entrance, it gradually gained acceptance, and still remains sufficiently recognizable in the corwhen it was taken by Alonzo Perez de Guzman for Ferdinand 1V. of rupted form of the present day. The first siege of the rock was in 1309, Spain, who, in order to attract inhabitants to the spot, offered an asylum to swindlers, thieves, and murderers, and promised to levy no taxes on the import or export of goods. The attack of Ismail ben Ferez in 1315 (2d siege) was frustrated; but in 1333 Vasco Paez de obliged to capitulate to Mahomet IV. (3d siege). Alphonso's attempts Meira, having allowed the fortifications and garrison to decay, was to recover possession (4th siege) were futile, though pertinacious and heroic, and he was obliged to content himself with a tribute for the rock from Abdul Melek of Granada; but after his successful attack on Algeciras in 1344 he was encouraged to try his fortune again at Gibraltar. In 1349 he invested the rock, but the siege (5th siege) was brought to an untimely close by his death from the plague in February 1350. The next or 6th siege resulted simply in the transference of the coveted position from the hands of the king of Morocco to those of Yussef 111. of Granada; and the 7th, undertaken by the Spanish count of Niebla, Enrico de Guzman, proved fatal to the besieger and his forces, In 1462, however, success attended the efforts of Alonzo

de Arcos (8th siege), and in August the rock passed once more under Christian sway. The duke of Medina Sidonia, a powerful grandee who had assisted in its capture, was anxious to get possession of the fortress, and though Henry IV. at first managed to maintain the claims of the crown, the duke ultimately made good his ambition by force of arms (9th siege), and in 1469 the king was constrained to declare his son and his heirs perpetual governors of Gibraltar. In 1479 Ferdinand and Isabella made the second duke marquis of Gibraltar, and in 1492 the third duke Don Juan was reluctantly allowed to retain the fortress. At length in 1501 Garcilaso de la Vega was ordered to take possession of the place in the king's name and it was formally incorporated with the domains of the crown. After Ferdinand and Isabella were both dead the duke Don Juan tried in 1506 to recover possession, and added a 10th to the list of sieges. Thirtyfour years afterwards the garrison had to defend itself against a much more formidable attack (11th siege)-the pirates of Algiers having determined to recover the rock for Mahomet and themselves. The conflict was severe, but resulted in the repulse of the besiegers. After this the Spaniards made great efforts to strengthen the place, and they succeeded so well that throughout Eurone Gibraltar was regarded as impregnable.

In the course of the War of the Spanish Succession, however, it was taken by a combined English and Dutch fleet under Sir George Rooke, assisted by a body of troops under Prince George of HesseDarmstadt. The captors had ostensibly fought in the interests of Charles archduke of Austria (afterwards Charles III.), but, though his sovereignty over the rock was proclaimed on July 24, 1704, Sir George Rooke on his own responsibility caused the English flag to be hoisted, and took possession in name of Queen Anne. It is hardly to the honour of England that it was both unprincipled enough to sanction and ratify the occupation, and ungrateful enough to leave unrewarded the general to whose unscrupulous patriotism the acquisition was due. The Spaniards keenly felt the injustice done to them, and the inhabitants of the town of Gibraltar in great numbers abandoned their homes rather than recognize the authority of the invaders. In October 1704 the rock was invested by sea and land; but the Spanish ships were dispersed by Sir John Leake, and the marquis of Villadarias fared so ill with his forces that he was replaced by Marshal Tessé, who was at length compelled to raise the siege in April 1705. During the next twenty years there were endless negotiations for the peaceful surrender of the fortress, and in 1726 the Spaniards again appealed to arms. But the Conde de la Torres, who had the chief command, succeeded no better than his predecessors, and the defence of the garrison under General Clayton and the earl of Portmore was so effective that the armistice of June 23d practically put a close to the siege, though two years elapsed before the general pacification ensued. The most memorable siege of Gibraltar, indeed one of the most memorable of all sieges, was that which it sustained from the combined land and sea forces of France and Spain during the years 1779-1783. The grand attack on the place was made on the 13th September 1782, and all the resources of power and science were exhausted by the assailants in the fruitless attempt. On the side of the sea they brought to bear against the fortress forty-six sail of the line, and a countless fleet of gun and mortar boats. But their chief hope lay in the floating batteries planned by D'Arçon, an eminent French engineer, and built at the cost of half a million sterling. They were so constructed as to be impenetrable by the red-hot shot which it was foreseen the garrison would employ; and such hopes were entertained of their efficiency that they were styled invincible. The Count d'Artois (afterwards Charles X.) hastened from Paris to witness the capture of the place. He arrived in time to see the total destruction of the floating batteries, and a considerable portion of the combined fleet, by the English fire. Despite this disaster, however, the siege continued till brought to a close by the general pacification, February 2d, 1783. The history of the four eventful years' siege is fully detailed in the work of Drinkwater, who himself took part in the defence, and in the Life of its gallant defender Sir George Augustus Eliott, afterwards Lord Heathfield, whose military skill and moral courage place him among the best soldiers and noblest men whom Europe produced during the 18th

century.

Since 1783 the history of Gibraltar has been comparatively uneventful. In the beginning of 1801 there were rumours of a Spanish and French attack, but the Spanish ships were defeated off Algeciras in June by Admiral Saumarez. Improvements in the fortifications, maintenance of military discipline, and legislation in regard to trade and smuggling are the principal matters of recent

interest.

See Col. Thomas James, History of the Herculean Ghaitz, Lond.. 1777: Ayala, Historia de Gibraltar, Madrid, 1782, English translation by Bell, Lond., 1845; Ancell, A Circumstantial Journal of the Blockade and Siege of Gibraltar, 1779-1783, Liverpool, 1784; Chevalier d'Arçon, Mémoires pour servir a l'histoire du siége de Gibraltar, Paris, 1783: Hennen. Sketches of the Medical Topography of the Mediterranean, Lond., 1830: Boissier. Voyage botanique dans la Midi de l'Espagne, Paris, 1839: Major Hort, Descriptions and Legends of Gibraltar, Lond.. 1839; J.

GIBSON, EDMUND (1669-1748), bishop of London, the learned compiler of the Codex Juris Ecclesiastici Anglicani, was born at Bampton in Westmoreland in 1669. After a promising career at one of the local schools, he was in 1686 entered a scholar at Queen's College, Oxford, where, at the early age of twenty-two (1692), he distinguished himself by the publication of a valuable edition of the Saxon Chronicle, with a Latin translation, indices, and notes. This was followed in 1693 by an annotated edition of the De Institutione Oratoria of Quintilian, and in 1694 by a translation in two volumes folio of Camden's Britannia, "with additions and improvements," in the preparation of which he had been largely assisted by the volunteered aid of various English antiquaries. Shortly after Tenison's elevation to the see of Canterbury in 1694 Gibson was appointed chaplain and librarian to the archbishop, and at a somewhat later period he became rector of Lambeth and archdeacon of Surrey. In the discussions which arose during the reigns of William and Anne relative to the rights and privileges of the Convocation, Gibson took a very active part, and in a series of pamphlets warmly argued for the right of the archbishop to continue or prorogue that assembly. The controversy suggested to him the idea of those researches which resulted in the Codex Juris Ecclesiastici Anglicani, published in two vols. folio in 1713,-a work which discusses more learnedly and comprehensively than any other the legal rights and duties of the English clergy, and the constitution, canons, and articles of the English Church. In 1715 Gibson was presented to the see of Lincoln, whence he was in 1723 translated to that of London, where for twenty-five years he exercised an immense influence, being the authority chiefly consulted by the court on all ecclesiastical affairs. While a conservative in church politics, he yet respected the various forms of dissent, and discouraged all attempts to prevent dissenters from worshipping in the manner and according to the principles which they preferred. He exercised a vigilant oversight over the morals of all ranks and classes of the community committed to his charge and his fearless denunciation of the licentious masquerades which had become highly popular at court finally lost him the royal favour. Among the literary efforts of his later years the principal were a series of Pastoral Letters in defence of the "gospel revelation," against "lukewarmness" and thusiasm," and on various topics of the day; also the Preservative against Popery, in 3 vols. folio (1738), a compilation of numerous controversial writings of eminent Church of England divines, dating chiefly from the period of James II. Gibson died on the 6th September 1748.

66 en

large additions by the author," was published at Oxford in 1761. A second edition of the Codex Juris, "revised and improved, with Besides the works already mentioned, Gibson published a number of Sermons, and other works of a religious and devotional kind. The Vita Thoma Bodleii with the Historia Bibliotheca Bodleiana in the Catalogi librorum manuscriptorum (Oxford, 1697), and the Reliquia Spelmanniana (Oxford, 1698), are also from his pen.

A

GIBSON, JOHN (1790-1866), sculptor, was born near Conway, in 1790, in very humble circumstances, his father being a market gardener. He is a notable example of one tinction by the force of a steady purpose and strong will. who, with no so-called start in life, carved his way to disTo his mother, whom he described as ruling his father and all the family, he owed, like many other great men, the energy and determination which carried him over every obstacle. He narrowly escaped emigration to America, the first step towards which took the family to Liverpool, where his mother's will interposed to keep them. He was then nine years of age, and was sent to school. windows of the print shops of Liverpool riveted his attention; and, having no means to purchase the commonest

The

M. Carter, Select Views in Gibraltar, Lond., 1846; Sayer, The History of Gibraltar, print, he acquired the habit of committing to ocular memory

Lond., 1862; A History of Gibraltar; with Photographic Illustrations by J. H. Mann Lond., 1870; Fenton, Sorties from Gibraltar, 1872.

the outline of one figure after another. drawing it on his

return home. Thus early did he form the system of observ-supported by Austria, an 1, as is natural with a nind like ing, remembering, and noting, sometimes even a month Gibson's, the first sense of his deficiencies in common later, scenes and momentary actions from nature-a habit matters of practice was depressing to him. He saw Italian peculiar in that degree to himself, but of the utmost im- youths already excelling, as they all do, in the drawing of portance to all artists to practice. In this way he, by the figure. But the tables were soon turned. His first degrees, transferred from the shop window to his paper at work in marble-a Sleeping Shepherd modelled from a home the chief figures from David's picture of Napoleon beautiful Italian boy-has qualities of the highest order. crossing the Alps, which, by particular request, he copied Gibson was soon launched, and distinguished patrons, first in bright colours as a frontispiece to a little schoolfellow's scnt by Canova, made their way to his studio in the Via new prayer-book, for sixpence. At fourteen years of age Fontanella. His aim, from the first day that he felt Gibson was apprenticed to a firm of cabinetmakers,-por- the power of the antique, was purity of character and trait and miniature painters in Liverpool requiring a beauty of form. He very seldom declined into the prettipremium which his father could not give. This employ- ness of Canova, and if he did not often approach the ment so disgusted him that after a year (being interesting masculine strength which redeems the faults of Thorwaldsen, and engaging then apparently as in after life) he per- he more than once surpassed him even in that quality. We suaded his masters to change his indentures, and bind allude specially to his Hunter and Dog, and to the grand him to the wood-carving with which their furniture was promise of his Theseus and Robber, which tako rank as the ornamented. This satisfied him for another year, when highest productions of modern sculpture. He was essenan introduction to the foreman of some marble works, and tially classic in feeling and aim, but here the habit of the sight of a small head of Bacchus, unsettled him again observation we have mentioned enabled him to snatch a He had here caught a glimpse of his true vocation, and grace beyond the reach of a mere imitator. His subjects in his leisure hours began to model with such success were gleaned from the free actions of the splendid Italiau that his efforts found their way to the notice of Mr people noticed in his walks, and afterwards baptized with Francis, the proprietor of the marble works. The wood- such mythological names as best fitted them. Thus a girl carving now, in turn, became his aversion; and having kissing a child, with a sudden wring of the figure, over her in vain entreated his masters to set him free, he insti- shoulder, became a Nymph and Cupid; a woman helping tuted a strike. He was every day duly at his post, but did | her child with his foot on her hand on to her lap, a Racno work. Threats, and even a blow, moved him not. At chante and Faun; his Amazon thrown from her Horse, ono length the offer of £70 from Francis for the rebellious of his most original productions, was taken from an accident apprentice was accepted, and Gibson found himself at he witnessed to a female rider in a circus; and the Hunter last bound to a master for the art of sculpture. Francis holding in his Dog was also the result of a street scene. paid the lad 6s. a week, and received good prices for his The prominence he gave among his favourite subjects to the works,-sundry early works by the youthful sculptor, which little god "of soft tribulations" was no less owing to his exist in Liverpool and the neighbourhood, going by the facilities for observing the all but naked Italian children, iu name of Francis to this day. It was while thus apprenticed the hot summers he spent in Rome. that Gibson attracted the notice of Mr Roscoe, whose taste in Greek art seems to have been superior to his judgment in Italian history. For him Gibson executed a basso rilievo in terra cotta, now in the Liverpool Museum. Roscoe opened to the sculptor the treasures of his library at Allerton, by which he became acquainted with the designs of the great Italian masters. A cartoon of the Fall of the Angels marked this period,—now also in the Liverpool Museum. We must pass over his studies in anatomy, pursued gratuitously by the kindness of a medical man, and his introductions to families of refinement and culture in Liverpool. Roscoe was an excellent guide to the young aspirant, pointing to the Greeks as the only examples for a sculptor. Gibson here found his true vocation. A basso rilievo of Psyche carried by the Zephyrs was the result. He sent it to the Royal Academy, where Flaxman, recognizing its merits, gave it an excellent place. Again he became unsettled. The ardent young breast panted for "the great university of Art"-Rome; and the first step to the desired goal was to London. Here he stood between the opposite advice and influence of Flaxman and Chantrey-the one urging him to Rome as the highest school of sculpture in the world, the other maintaining that London could do as much for him. It is not difficult to guess which was Gibson's choice. He arrived in Rome in October 1817, at a comparatively late age for a first visit. There he immediately experienced the charm and goodness of the true Italian character in the person of Canova, to whom he had introductions,--the Venetian putting not only his experience in art but his purse at the English student's service. Up to this time, though his designs show a fire and power of imagination in which no teaching is missed, Gibson had had no instruction, and had studied at no Academy. In Rome he first became acquainted with rules and technicalities, in which the merest tyro was before him. Canova introduced him into the Academy

In monumental and portrait statues for public places, necessarily represented in postures of dignity and repose, Gibson was very happy. His largest effort of this class—the group of Queen Victoria supported by Justice and Clemency, in the palace of Westminster-we agree with himself in pronouncing his finest work in the round. Of noble character also in execution and expression of thought is the statue of Mr Huskisson with the bared arm; and no less, in effect of aristocratic ease and refinement, the seated figure of Dudley North. He lays down the axiom in his journal that the Greeks represented "men thinking, and women tranquil," and to the departure from this rule we attribute the unattractive colossal statue of Sir Robert Peel in Westminster Abbey. The very animation he has given to the head is too individual to harmonize with the classic drapery, or with the real character of the man. The great statesman is here colloquial rather than eloquent in expression, while the position of the right foot suggests the idea of a walking figure. Great as he was in the round, Gibson's chief excellence lay in basso rilievo, and in this less disputed sphere he obtained his greatest triumphs. His thorough knowledge of the horse, and his constant study of the Elgin. marbles-casts of which are in Rome-resulted in the two matchless bassi rilievi, the size of life, which belong to the earl of Fitzwilliam-the Hours leading the Horses of the Sun, and Phaethon driving the Chariot of the Sun. Most of his monumental works are also in basso rilievo. Some of these are of a truly refined and pathetic character, such as the monument to the countess of Leicester, that to his friend Mrs Huskisson in Chichester Cathedral, and that of the Bonomi children. In reviewing the qualities most characteristic of this great artist, that of passionate expres-sion may be said to stand foremost. Passion, either indulged or repressed, was the natural impulse of his art :repressed as in the Hours leading the Horses of the Sun.

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