Person:Arthur Johnston (1)

  1. John Johnston, Laird of CaskiebenEst 1565 - 1613
  2. Gilbert JohnstonAbt 1571 - Aft 1620
  3. George JohnstonAbt 1573 -
  4. Margaret Johnston1575 -
  5. Arthur Johnston1577 - 1641
  6. Isabel Johnston1577 -
  7. Agnes Johnston1579 -
  8. William Johnston1580 -
  9. Janet Johnston1581 -
  10. Elizabeth JohnstonAbt 1583 -
  11. Barbara Johnston1583 -
  12. Thomas Johnston1585 - Aft 1618
  13. Jean Johnston1585 -
  14. Helen JohnstonAbt 1588 -
m. 1625
  1. Edward JohnsonAbt 1610 - Bef 1656
  2. Barbara Johnston1631 -
  3. Elizabeth JohnstonAbt 1633 -
  4. Margaret JohnstonAbt 1635 -
  5. William Johnston1636 -
  6. Edward Johnston1638 - 1701
  7. Edward Johnson1649 - 1704
Facts and Events
Name Arthur Johnston
Gender Male
Birth? 1577/1587 Keithhall and Kinkell, Aberdeenshire, ScotlandCaskieben
Marriage to Elizabeth Gorden
Marriage to Mary Kynuncle
Marriage 1625 to Barbara Gordon
Death? 1641 Oxford, Oxfordshire, England"of Oxford"
Burial? Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
Ancestral File Number 8J3L-1B?
Reference Number? Q4799282?
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Arthur Johnston (c.1579–1641) was a Scottish poet and physician. He was born in Caskieben (later renamed Keithhall) near Inverurie in Aberdeenshire. His father, Sir George Johnston, was an Aberdeenshire laird, and his mother Christian Forbes was the daughter of Lord Forbes.

Johnston is thought to have begun his university studies at one, or both, of the colleges at the University of Aberdeen, but around 1608 he went to Italy and received an M.D. at Padua in 1610. Afterwards he lived at Sedan, France as professor at the Academy of Sedan, in the company of the exiled Andrew Melville, and in 1619 was in practice in Paris. He appears to have returned to Scotland about the time of James VI's death in 1625, and to have been in Aberdeen in about 1628. He met William Laud in Edinburgh at the time of Charles I's Scottish coronation (1633). In that year, he had published a volume entitled Cantici Salomonis paraphrasis poetica, which, dedicated to Charles I, brought him to Laud's notice.

Johnston was encouraged by Laud in his literary efforts, possibly as a strike against George Buchanan's reputation as a Latin poet. Johnston was appointed rector of King's College, Aberdeen, in June 1637. Four years later he died at Oxford, on his way to London at Laud's invitation.

Johnston left more than ten works, all in Latin. Only two of these, published in the same year, are notable: (a) his version of the Psalms (Psalmorum Davidis paraphrasis poetica et canticorum evangelicorum, Aberdeen, 1637), and (b) his anthology of contemporary Latin verse by Scottish poets (Deliciae poetarum Scotorum huius aevi illustrium, Amsterdam, 1637).

The full version of the Psalms was the result of Laud's encouragement. It was for some time a strong rival of Buchanan's work, though not superior to the latter. The Deliciae, in two small thick volumes of 699 and 575 pages, was a patriotic effort in imitation of the various volumes (under a similar title) which had been popular on the Continent during the second decade of the century. The volumes are dedicated by Johnston to John Scot of Scotstarvet, at whose expense the collected works were published after Johnston's death, at Middelburg (1642). Selections from his own poems occupy pages 439-647 of the first volume, divided into three sections, Parerga, Epigrammata and Musae Aulicae.

He published a volume of epigrams at Aberdeen in 1632. In these pieces he shows himself at his best. His sacred poems, which had appeared in the Opera (1642), were reprinted by Lauder in his Poetarum Scotorum musae sacrae (1739). The earliest lives are by Lauder and Benson (in Psalmi Davidici, 1741). Ruddiman's Vindication of Mr George Buchanan's Paraphrase (1745) began a pamphlet controversy regarding the merits of the rival poets.

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