Francis Henry Blackburne Daniell (19 January 1845 – 10 February 1921) was an Anglo-Irish barrister and historian, known for his work on the Calendar of State Papers.
Blackburne Daniell entered the Inner Temple in 1866, and was a Fellow of Trinity College from 1869. He was called to the bar in 1871.[1]
He worked as an editor on the Historical Manuscripts Commission and for the Calendar of State Papers, concentrating on the reign of Charles II of England.[1] With Charles Thornton Forster he wrote Life and Letters of Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq (London, 1881).[3][4]
Personal life
In 1877, he married Caroline Sophia (1844-1933), daughter of the barrister and agriculturist William Bence Jones, of Lisselane, County Cork, Ireland, and of 34, Elvaston Place, London. They had four sons- George (1878-1917), William Arthur (1881-1951), Francis (1882-1903), and Henry Edmund (1885-1970), who pursued military and civil service careers- and a daughter, Alice (1879-1925), who married Edward Granville Browne and was mother of the judge Sir Patrick Browne.[2]