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"terrae filius" Definitions
  1. [archaic] (archaic) a person of lowly birth
  2. a student (as at Oxford University) formerly appointed to deliver a satirical oration— compare PREVARICATOR

4 Sentences With "terrae filius"

How to use terrae filius in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "terrae filius" and check conjugation/comparative form for "terrae filius". Mastering all the usages of "terrae filius" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The bawdy poem The Oxford- Act (1693) contains a terræ filius speech, and is attributed to Alicia D'Anvers. Nicholas Amhurst took Terrae-filius, Or, The Secret History of the University of Oxford for the title of a series of periodical essays appearing from 1721, making up a 1726 book.
He possessed small literary qualifications for the office, and his election provoked the sarcasm of Nicholas Amhurst, who satirized Warton across three numbers of his Terrae Filius; "Squeaking Tom of Maudlin" is the sobriquet Amhurst conferred on him. After 1723 Warton ceased to reside regularly in Oxford. In that year he became vicar of Basingstoke, Hampshire, and master of the grammar school there. Among his pupils was the naturalist Gilbert White.
Frontispiece to Terrae-filius, Or, The Secret History of the University of Oxford (1726), by William Hogarth The terræ filius (son of the soil) was a satirical orator who spoke at public ceremonies of the University of Oxford, for over a century. There was official sanction for personal attacks, but some of the speakers overstepped the line and fell into serious trouble. The custom was terminated during the 18th century. The comparable speaker at the University of Cambridge was called "prevaricator".
He was a gambler, losing heavily, and this was regarded as a scandal. Hearne mentions that a candidate taunted him in public with the comment Jacta est alea; the same story is told in Terrae Filius, the author of which, Nicholas Amhurst, Delaune is said to have expelled from St John's. Amhurst's own mocking account of his 1719 expulsion from Oxford was dedicated to Delaune, and mixes satire inextricably with politics.Amhurst, Nicholas, 'Delaune, William (1659–1728)', Dictionary of National Biography, London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.. Delaune was elected Margaret Lecturer in Divinity on 18 February 1715, and installed prebendary of Worcester.

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