Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 38.djvu/19

 were republished, under the editorship of [q. v.], in the ‘British Merchant,’ London, 1721, 8vo (i. 206-22, iii. 3-92), but there is no evidence to show to what extent he was aided by other writers in the same work. He also published ‘Three Letters relating to the South Sea Company and the Bank,’ &c., London, 1720, 8vo, in which he foretold the disastrous results of the South Sea scheme.

 MILNER, JOHN (1628–1702), nonjuring minister, second son of John Milner and Mary, daughter of Gilbert Ramsden, was born at Skircoat, in the parish of Halifax, and was baptised 10 Feb. 1627-8. He was educated at the Halifax grammar school and entered at Christ's College, Cambridge, 21 June 1642. He probably left without a degree before the parliamentary visitation of the university. Returning to Halifax he made the acquaintance of [q. v.], subsequently bishop of Chichester, whose sister he seems to have married. Milner was probably with Lake at Oldham in 1651. He is stated to have been curate of Middleton, but the Middleton registers contain no mention of him. In the accounts of the quarrel between Lake and the presbyterian classis of the neighbourhood, a John Milner is styled ‘of Chadderton,’ near Oldham, where a schoolmaster of that name is known to have been appointed in August 1641. Lake's friend was preaching at Oldham as late as 1654. Milner is said to have subsequently returned to Halifax, and at the Restoration was given the curacy of Beeston in the parish of Halifax by Lake, who had then become vicar of Leeds. In 1662 he obtained the degree of B.D. at Cambridge by royal letters. His petition for his degree states that he had been deprived of a good benefice during the rebellion. In the same year he was made minister of St. John's, Leeds, was inducted vicar of Leeds 4 Aug. 1673, and elected prebendary of Ripon 29 March 1681.

On the revolution of 1688 he joined the nonjurors, was deprived of all his preferments, and retired to St. John's College, Cambridge, where he lived in comparative ease and much respected. He died 16 Feb. 1702, and was buried in the college chapel on 19 Feb. with great state. He had a good reputation for skill in Eastern languages, but was exceedingly modest. His only son, Thomas, vicar of Bexhill, Sussex, proved a great benefactor to Magdalene College, Cambridge, under his will dated 5 Sept. 1721.

Milner published:
 * 1) ‘Conjectanea in Isaiam ix. 1, item in Parallela quædam Veteris ac Novi Testamenti in quibus Versionis LXX Interpretum … cum Textu Hebræo conciliationem meditatur Author,' a work of considerable learning, dedicated to D. Duport, master of Magdalene College, Cambridge, and Dr. Costel, professor of Arabic there, London, 1673.
 * 2) ‘A Collection of the Church History of Palestine from the Birth of Christ to the Beginning of the Empire of Diocletian,’ London, 1688, 4to.
 * 3) ‘A Short Dissertation concerning the Four Last Kings of Judah,’ London, 1687 or 1689, 4to, occasioned by Joseph Scaliger's ‘Judicium de Thesi Chronologica.’
 * 4) ‘De Nethinim sive Nethinæis et de eis qui se Corban Deo nominabant disputatiuncula adversus Eugabinum, Card. Baronium,’ Cambridge, 1690, 4to.
 * 5) ‘A Defence of Archbishop Usher against Dr. Cary and Dr. Isaac Vossius, … with an Introduction concerning the Uncertainty of Chronology,’ Cambridge, 1694, 8vo.
 * 6) ‘A Discourse of Conscience,’ &c., London, 1697 or 1699, 8vo.
 * 7) ‘A View of the Dissertation upon the Epistles of Phalaris, Themistocles, &c., lately published by the Rev. Dr. Bentley, also of the Examination of that Dissertation by the Honourable Mr. Boyle,’ London, 1698, 8vo.
 * 8) ‘A Brief Examination of Some Passages to the Chronological Fact of a Letter written to Dr. Sherlock in his Vindication, in a letter to a friend,’ with ‘A Further Examination [of the above] in a second letter.’
 * 9) ‘An Account of Mr. Locke's Religion out of his own Writings,’ &c. (charging Locke with Socinianism), London, 1700, 8vo.
 * 10) ‘Animadversiones upon M. Le Clerc's Reflexions upon our Saviour and His Apostles,’ Cambridge, 1702, 8vo. Two anonymous pamphlets on Bishop John Lake's ‘Dying Profession,’ sometimes assigned to Milner, seem to be by  [q. v.] They were published at London in 1690.

Milner left in manuscript a translation in Latin of the Targum on the First and Second Book of Chronicles, and other works on Scriptural chronology and current ecclesiastical controversies.

[Watson's Halifax; Thoresby's Vicaria Leodiensis; State Papers, October and November 1661; Appendix iii. to Minutes of Manchester Classis (Chetham Soc.); Oldham Local Notes and Queries; Lists of the Probators of 1641-2 (House of Lords' MSS.); Raines MSS. xxxii. 20 seq. (Chetham Library, Manchester); Wilford's Memorials; Watt's Bibl. Brit.; Graduati