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Life [ top ] Works [ top ] Criticism [ top ] Notes Dictionary of National Biography narrates that he entered Jesuit noviciate at St. Omer, 1754; called to Irish bar, 1766; abandoned law to study science in London, FRS, 1780; Copley medallist, 1782; settled in Dublin, 1787; hon. LLD, TCD, President Royal Irish Academy, 1799. See also Richard Ryan, Biographia Hibernica: Irish Worthies (1821), Vol. II, p.357-59. Jürgen Schneider & Ralf Sotscheck, Ireland: Eine Bibliographie selbständiger deutschsprachiger (Verlag Georg Büchner Buchhandlung 1989), cite works translated into German incl. An Essay on Phlogiston and the Constitution of Acids [trans. Berlin 1783]; Elements of Mineralogy (1784) [trans. Berlin 1784]; An Estimate of the Temperature of Different Latitudes (1787); What are the Manures Most Advantageously applied to the Various Sorts of Soils, and what are the Causes of their Beneficial Effect, &c. (1794) [trans. Göttingen 1796]; An Essay on Phlogiston, and the Constitution of Acids, to which are added Notes, exhibiting and Defending the Antiphlogistic Theory, by Messrs. de Morveau, Lavoisier, de la Place ... (1789) [trans. Berlin 1791] (p.272). COPAC lists Charles-William Scheele, Chemical observations and experiments on air and fire, intro. by Torbern Bergman, trans. from German by J. R. Forster, [with] notes by Richard Kirwan [and] a letter to him from Joseph Priestley (1780); Experiments on air ... Read at the Royal Society, Jan. 15, 1783 [1784] Hon. Henry Cavendish [&] Richard Kirwan (1784); An Estimate of the Temperature of different latitudes (1787); Of the strength of Acids, and the proportion of ingredients in neutral salts (1791); A comparative view of Meteorological Observations made in Ireland since the year 1788, with some hints towards forming prognostics of the weather (1794); What are the Manures most advantageously applicable to the various sorts of soils, and what are the causes of their beneficial effect, &c. (1794); Experiments on a new earth: found near Stronthian in Scotland (1794); Meteorological Observations in Ireland in the year 1793 (1794); Stephen Dickson, An essay on chemical nomenclature ... In which are comprised observations on the same subject, by Richard Kirwan (1796); Of the Composition and Proportion of Carbon in Bitumens and Mineral Coal (Dublin, 1796), 4o.; The manures most advantageously applicable to the various sorts of soils, and the causes of their beneficial effect in each particular instance [3rd edn.] (London: Vernor & Hood 1796; 1801), [4],96pp.; Essay in answer to the following question proposed by the Royal Irish Acadamy, what are the manures most advantageously applicable to the various sorts of soils and what are the causes of their beneficial effect in each particular instance? (1795); Additional Observations on the Proportion of Real Acid in the three Antient known Mineral Acids, and on the ingredients in various neutral salts, and other compounds (1799); Geological essays (London: T. Bensley for D. Bremmer 1799), xvi, 502pp.; Observations on the proofs of the Huttonian theory of the Earth adduced by Sir James Hall, &c. (1800); Of the Variations of the Atmosphere (1801); An essay on the Analysis of Mineral Waters (1799); Logick: An essay on the elements, principles and different modes of reasoning (1807); Metaphysical Essay: containing the principles and fundamental objects of that science (1809); with Joseph Dawson, Catalogue of Minerals, collected and arranged by Joseph Dawson of Royds Hall, Bradford (1820); Joseph Hayward, et al., On the Science of Agriculture: comprising a Commentary on and Comparative Investigation of the Agricultural Chemistry of Mr. Kirwan and Sir Humphry Davy; the Code of Agriculture of Sir J. Sinclair, Sir J. Banks, and other authors on the subject (1825); Emmanuel Grison, Michelle Goupil, and Patrice Bret, eds., A Scientific Correspondence during the chemical revolution: Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau and Richard Kirwan [Office for History of Science and Technology] (Berkeley: California UP 1994), vi, 257pp. FRENCH, Eléments de minéralogie, traduits de l'anglois de M. Kirwan ... par M. Gibelin ... [etc.] (1785); Essai sur le phlogistique, et sur la constitution des acides, traduit de l'anglois de M. Kirwan; avec des notes de MM. de Morveau, Lavoisier, de La Place, Monge, Berthollet, & de Fourcroy (1788); Estimation de la température de différens degrés de latitude par Richard Kirwan ... Ouvrage tr. de l'anglois, par Pierre-Auguste Adet ... [&c.] (1790); Supplement au Traité Chimique de l'Air et du Feu ...: Contenant un tableau abrégé des nouvelles découvertes sur les diverses espèces d'air par J. G. Léonhardy; des notes de M. R. Kirwan, & une lettre du Docteur Priestley ... ; Traduit et augmenté ... par M. le Baron de Dietrich ... ; Avec la traduction, par M. M. de l'Académie de Dijon, des expériences de M. Scheele sur la quantité d'air par qui se trouve dans l'atmosphère (1785); Traité des engrais tiré des différens rapports,: faits au Département d'Agriculture d'Angleterre, avec des notes; suivi de la traduction du Mémoire de Kirwan sur les engrais, et de l'explication des principaux termes chimiques employés dans cet ouvrage, par F. G. Maurice [...] (1800). ITALIAN, Esperimenti sull'aria epatica ... letti alla Società Reale di Londra a' 22 Dicembre 1785; Operetta tradotta dall'Inglese dal Sig. Ab. G. B. Vasco (1778); Saggio meteorologico, contenente una valutazione della temperatura di differenti latitudini di Riccardo Kirwan ... pubblicato in Londra l'anno 1787, e tradotto dall'Inglese (1790). GERMAN, Herrn Carl Wilhelm Scheele ... Chemische Abhandlung von Luft und Feuer / Nebst einem Vorberichte [aus dem Schwedischen] von Torbern Bergmann ... mit einer eigenen Abhandlung über die Luftgattungen wie auch mit der Herren Kirwan und Priestley Bemerkungen und Herrn Scheelens Erfahrungen über die Menge der im Dunstkreise befindlichen reinsten Luft vermehrt und mit einem Register versehen, von D. Johann Gottfried Leonhardi (1782); Lorenz Florenz Friedrich von Crell. Versuche und Beobachtungen über die specifische Schwere und die Anziehungskraft verschiedener Salzarten [Experiments and observations on the specific Gravities, and Attractive Powers of Various Saline Substances]; und über die wahre neuentdeckte Natur des Phlogiston's ... aus dem Englischen übersetzt und mit einer Vorrede versehen von L. Crell. [A translation of two papers read before the Royal Society] (1783); Untersuchung über die vermeinte Entstehung der Gebirgsarten durch Feuer (1798).
Mary Shelleys Frankenstein (1813) gives Mr Kirwan is the name of the magistrate before whom Frankenstein is brought when in Ireland, suspected of one of his creations crimes, having travelled there from the Orkneys where he rejected the monsters demands that he create a female of the same breed for him. (See under Marilyn Butler, supra.) Note that the Chavalier de la Tocnaye saw Kirwans mineralogical display at TCD (see Constantia Maxwell, Strangers in Ireland, 1954). Marilyn Butler ( ed.), Frankenstein (OUP 1969; eds. to 1994) that one of Mary Wollestonecroft Shelleys two named Irish characters shares a name, perhaps coincidentally, with the leading Irish chemist of the day, Richard Kirwan (1733-1812), described in the DNB as the Nestor of English chemistry. The name of the fisherman who finds the body of the victim is Daniel Nugent; the gaolers wife, who tends Frankenstein, says hung for hanged (p.149) but shows no other sign of Hiberno-Irish variation. On acquittal, he hastens to Dublin, ... the packet sailed with a fair wind from Ireland, and I had quitted for ever the country which had been to me the scene of so much misery; ... the wind that blew me from the detested shore of Ireland ... Holyhead, which we were now entering (p.154-55). [ top ] Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco) |