Charles Duke Yonge (30 November 1812 – 30 November 1891)[1] was an English historian, classicist and cricketer. He wrote numerous works of modern history, and translated several classical works. His younger brother was George Edward Yonge.
Biography
Charles Duke Yonge was born in Eton, Berkshire on 30 November 1812.[1] He was baptised on 25 December 1812. He was the eldest of eight children to the Reverend Charles Yonge (1781–1830) and Elizabeth Lord (?–1868). His parents married on 4 December 1811. His grandparents were Duke Yonge and Catherine Crawley on his father's side, and Joseph Lord and Corbetta Owen of Pembroke South Wales on his mother's side.[2][better source needed]
A gradus ad Parnassum: For the use of Eton, Westminster, Harrow, and Charterhouse schools, King's college, London, and Marlborough college (1850) Longmans
Thatcher, Oliver J., ed. (1901). The Ideas That Have Influenced Civilization in the Original Documents: Ten Volumes. Vol. III: The Roman World. Milwaukee: The Roberts-Manchester Publishing Co.
External links
English Wikisource has original works by or about: