The Gentleman's Magazine
The Gentleman's Magazine was a monthly magazine founded in London, England, by Edward Cave in January 1731. It ran uninterrupted for almost 200 years, until 1922. It was the first to use the term magazine for a periodical. Samuel Johnson's first regular employment as a writer was with The Gentleman's Magazine.
History
The original complete title was The Gentleman's Magazine: or, Trader's monthly intelligencer. Cave's innovation was to create a monthly digest of news and commentary on any topic the educated public might be interested in, from commodity prices to Latin poetry. It carried original content from a stable of regular contributors, as well as extensive quotations and extracts from other periodicals and books. Cave, who edited The Gentleman's Magazine under the pen name "Sylvanus Urban", was the first to use the term magazine for a periodical. Contributions to the magazine frequently took the form of letters, addressed to "Mr. Urban". The iconic illustration of St. John's Gate on the front of each issue depicted Cave's home, in effect, the magazine's "office".Before the founding of The Gentleman's Magazine, there were specialized journals, but no such wide-ranging publications.
Samuel Johnson's first regular employment as a writer was with The Gentleman's Magazine. During a time when parliamentary reporting was banned, Johnson regularly contributed parliamentary reports as "Debates of the Senate of Magna Lilliputia". Though they reflected the positions of the participants, the words of the debates were mostly Johnson's own. The name "Columbia", a poetic name for America coined by Johnson, first appears in a 1738 weekly publication of the debates of the British Parliament in the magazine.
A skilled businessman, Edward Cave developed an extensive distribution system for The Gentleman's Magazine. It was read throughout the English-speaking world and continued to flourish through the 18th century and much of the 19th century under a series of different editors and publishers. It went into decline towards the end of the 19th century and finally ceased general publication in September 1907. However, issues consisting of four pages each were printed in very small editions between late 1907 and 1922 in order to keep the title formally "in print".
Series
- 1731–1735 The Gentleman's Magazine or Monthly Intelligencer
- 1736–1833 The Gentleman's Magazine and Historical Chronicle
- 1834–1856 New Series: The Gentleman's Magazine
- 1856 –1868 New Series: The Gentleman's Magazine and Historical Review
- 1868 –1922 Entirely New Series: The Gentleman's Magazine
Indexes
An abstract of the "chief contents of The Gentleman’s Magazine from 1731 to 1868" was published by George L. Gomme in 1891. He describes it as "excerpts from the original publications containing local history and information, topographical details, and family history are presented here, organized into volumes by county". Gomme's work has been digitized and indexed by Ancestry.com and is available online to or at .
A four-volume set of indexes was compiled by Samuel Ayscough with some assistance or later editing by John Nichols and by Gabriel Richard. The contents of these indexes are given as:
- Volume 1 – 1731 – 1786
- *Index to the essays, dissertations and historical passages
- *Index to poetry
- *Index to names
- *Index to plates
- *Index to books
- Volume 2 – 1787 – 1818
- *Index to the essays, dissertations and historical passages
- *Index to poetry
- *Index to names
- *Index to plates
- *Index to books
- *Index to books announced
- *Index to musical publications
- Volume 3 – 1731 – 1818
- *Index to plates
- Volume 4 – 1731 – 1780
- *Index to names and surnames
- Ayscough, Samuel; Nichols, John. "General Index to the Gentleman's Magazine" Nichols, 1789. Vol. 2. . Indexes names from Vol. 1 "To the End of the LVIth Volume of the Gentleman’s Magazine" and covers 1731–1786.
- Ayscough, Samuel; Nichols, John. "General Index to the Gentleman's Magazine 1787–1818" Nichols, 1821. Vol. 3.
A few partial indexes to genealogical events in The Gentleman's Magazine are also available:
- Fry, Edward Alexander. "Index to the Marriages in the Gentleman's Magazine, 1731–1768"
- Fry, Edward Alexander. "Index to the Biographical and Obituary Notices in Gentleman's Magazine, 1731–1780"
- Marriages from The Gentleman's Magazine for the years 1731 to 1768 were included in Boyd's Marriage Index.
- Obituaries were included in Musgrave's Obituaries.
- Joseph Foster's index to marriages includes marriages from this periodical, as well as from The Times and the Historical Register; but covers surname beginning Aa–Alexander only.
- offers an online subject search tool for the years 1731–1750.
Authors of works appearing in ''The Gentleman's Magazine''
- Mark Akenside, physician and poet
- Henry Aldrich, English theologian and philosopher
- Richard Allestree or Allestry, Royalist churchman and provost of Eton College from 1665
- Anthony Alsop, Church of England clergyman and poetical writer
- George Ashby, English learned antiquary and sometime president of St. John's College, Cambridge
- Francis Atterbury, English man of letters, politician, Bishop of Rochester, and Dean of Westminster Abbey
- Samuel Badcock, English nonconformist minister, theological writer and literary critic
- Henry Baker
- John Bancks, miscellaneous writer
- Mary Barber, poet, mother of nine children, and a member of Swift's circle
- Samuel Bowden, English physician and poet
- John Bowle, Church of England clergyman known as a writer on Spanish literature
- Samuel Boyse, Irish poet
- Peregrine Branwhite, English poet
- Anna Eliza Bray, British novelist
- James Norris Brewer, English topographer and novelist
- James Shudi Broadwood, piano maker in Middlesex and a magistrate in Surrey
- Rev. Moses Browne, Church of England priest and poet
- Edward John Carlos, English antiquarian and writer on architecture
- Thomas Christie, radical political writer
- Charles Clarke , antiquarian
- Rev. John Darwall, Church of England clergyman and hymnodist
- Rev. John Duncombe
- Rev. William Dunkin, D.D., Irish poet and Anglican clergyman
- William Falconer, Scottish poet
- Thomas Faulkner, topographer of Chelsea, Fulham, Kensington etc.
- James Frederic Ferguson, Irish antiquary born in Charleston, South Carolina
- Thomas Fisher
- Rev. George Glasse, chaplain and a Fellow of the Royal Society
- Sir Andrew Halliday, Scottish physician, reformer, and writer
- Sir John Hawkins, English author and friend of Samuel Johnson and Horace Walpole
- Rev. William Hawkins, English clergyman, poet, and dramatist
- Susanna Highmore, minor British poet
- Samuel Johnson
- Andrew Kippis, English nonconformist clergyman and biographer
- Rev. John Langhorne, Church of England clergyman, poet and co-translator of Plutarch's Lives
- William Lauder, Scottish literary forger; article on John Milton's Paradise Lost was largely a plagiarism of earlier works
- Sir Sidney Lee
- John Lockman, English author
- Michael Lort, Welsh clergyman, academic, and antiquary
- William Markham, English divine and archbishop of York
- Arthur Murphy, Irish writer
- Laetitia Pilkington, Dublin-born adventuress
- Robert Riccaltoun, Scottish Presbyterian divine and friend of poet James Thomson
- William Roscoe, English historian and miscellaneous writer; poetry by him first appeared in the magazine in 1807
- Richard Savage, English poet
- George Stephens, English archeologist and philologist who worked in Scandinavia
- Jonathan Swift, Anglo-Irish satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer, poet and cleric who became Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin
- Captain Philip Thicknesse
- James Thomson, Scottish poet and playwright best known for his masterpiece The Seasons and the lyrics of "Rule, Britannia!"
- Nigel Tourneur, pseudonym of a fin de siècle writer known for one work only—Hidden Witchery, a collection of seven short stories and a short prose drama
- Thomas Tyrwhitt, English classical scholar and critic
- Michael Tyson , Church of England clergyman, academic, antiquary and artist
- Richard Weston
- Charles Woodmason, English-born American poet
- Edward Young, English poet, best remembered for Night-Thoughts
- William Hepworth Dixon, English traveler, historian, author
Artists, painters, topographers associated with ''The Gentleman's Magazine''
- James Norris Brewer English topographer and novelist
- Thomas Faulkner, topographer
- John Gibson, cartographer
- Moses Griffith, Welsh draughtsman, engraver, and water colourist
- Bartholomew Howlett, English draughtsman and engraver
- Samuel Rawle, English topographical engraver and draughtsman
- William George Moss, chief illustrator c.1819