Richard Bentley
(born Jan. 27, 1662, Oulton, Yorkshire, Eng. — died July 14, 1742, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire) English clergyman and classical scholar. He was appointed Boyle lecturer at Oxford in 1692, became keeper of the Royal Library in 1694, and was named master of Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1700. He displayed his skill in textual emendation and his knowledge of ancient metre in
Epistola ad Joannem Millium (1691). In
Dissertation on the Epistles of Phalaris (1699), he proved the epistles to be spurious; his dispute with Charles Boyle over their authenticity was satirized by
Jonathan Swift in
The Battle of the Books (1704). He also published critical texts of classical authors, including
Horace, and made linguistic contributions to the study of ancient Greek.
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