Ellin Devis
Ellin Devis | |
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Born |
December 1746 United Kingdom |
Died | February 1820 |
Nationality | English |
Occupation |
Educator Writer |
Ellin Devis (December 1746 - February 1820) was a schoolmistress and author of The Accidence (1775), a popular eighteenth-century grammar. She came from an artistic family - her father Arthur was known for his "conversation pieces" and her brother Arthur for historical portraits.[1]
According to Carol Percy, The Accidence “seems to have been the first English grammar directed exclusively to a female audience.”[2] Despite being written for girls, Devis’s grammar was recommended by her peers as a general introduction to Robert Lowth’s Short Introduction to English Grammar (1762).[3]
Devis taught at several schools in fashionable areas of London, and her pupils include Maria Edgeworth, Frances Burney (later novelist Madame d'Arblay) and her sister Susannah, Hester Thrale and later her daughter Cecilia Piozzi. While Devis was mistress of the Queen’s Square school it was known as “the Young Ladies Eton.”[4]
References
- ↑ Paviere, Sydney H. (1950). The Devis Family of Painters. Leigh-on-Sea: Lewis.
- ↑ Percy, Carol (1994). "Paradigms for their Sex? Women's Grammars in Late Eighteenth-Century England". Histoire Epistemologie Langage 16: 123.
- ↑ By a Society of Gentlemen (1775). "Review of Devis". The Critical Review: or, Annals of Literature. the thirty-ninth.
- ↑ Cajka, Karen (2003). The Forgotten Women Grammarians of Eighteenth-Century England. University of Connecticut.
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