Mackintosh MacKay

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Rev. Dr Mackintosh MacKay, (1800 - 1873). Of Dunoon, Melbourne and Sydney, Church of Scotland and Free Church minister, Gaelic scholar

Mackintosh MacKay (1793 – 1873) was a Scottish minister and author who served as Moderator of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland in 1849. He edited the Highland Society's prodigious Gaelic dictionary ('Dictionarium Scoto-Celticum)[1] in 1828.

Life[]

MacKay was born on 18 November 1793 at Duardbeg on Edrachillis Bay in Sutherland, one of seven children to Cpt Alexander Mackay and his wife Helen.[2] He studied at St Andrews University then at Divinity Hall in Edinburgh. He was ordained by the Church of Scotland at Laggan in 1825 and translated to the far larger parish of Dunoon in 1832.[3]

His 27 February 1840 Address to the Parishioners of Dunoon and Kilmun, given from the Manse in Dunoon, was published later that year. An 1842 addendum by MacKay was later included.[4]

He was one of the many ministers who split from the established Church of Scotland in the Disruption of 1843. In 1849, he succeeded the Very Rev Patrick Clason of Buccleuch Church as Moderator of the General Assembly. The Assembly was held at Tanfield Hall in Canonmills.[5] He was succeeded in turn by Very Rev Nathaniel Paterson in 1850.

In the early 1850s he travelled to Australia to spread the views of the Free Church.[6] From 1854 he was minister of the Gaelic Free Church in Melbourne. He became minister of St George's Church in Sydney in May 1856, being responsible for its first permanent purpose-built church in 1860.[7] Returning to Scotland in the 1860s, he spent his final years preaching in Tarbert on the Isle of Harris.

He died at 3 Bellfield[8] in Portobello, Edinburgh on 17 May 1873. He is buried in Duddingston Kirkyard in south Edinburgh. The grave lies against the western boundary wall.

A second memorial stands in the Grange Cemetery in south Edinburgh, east of the eastern path, next to the large obelisk to Christian Isobel Johnstone.

Publications[]

(as editor) *Dictionarium Scoto-Celticum: A Dictionary of the Gaelic Language (1828) (the first Gaelic dictionary to contain 'Vocabularies of Latin and English Words')

  • Memoir of
  • Exposition of Matthew 5
  • Statistical Account of the United Parishes of Dunoon and Kilmun[9]

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. ^ MacKay, Mackintosh (editor) (1828). Dictionarium scoto-celticum : a dictionary of the Gaelic language : comprising an ample vocabulary of Gaelic words, as preserved in vernacular speech, manuscripts, or printed works, with their signification and various meanings in English and Latin, illustrated by suitable examples and phrases, and with etymological remarks, and vocabularies of Latin and English words, with their translation into Gaelic : to which are prefixed, an introduction explaining the nature, objects and sources of the work, and a compendium of Gaelic grammar. Edinburgh: W. Blackwood. Retrieved 12 July 2018.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  2. ^ "Mackintosh Mackay, Rev. Dr". geni_family_tree.
  3. ^ Ewing, William Annals of the Free Church
  4. ^ Address to the Parishioners of Dunoon and Kilmun, J. Hislop (1840)
  5. ^ "SCOTLAND. » 2 Jun 1849 » The Spectator Archive". The Spectator Archive.
  6. ^ "Jubilee History of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church of Carlton". www.electricscotland.com.
  7. ^ "About Us". www.stgeorgespcea.org.au.
  8. ^ Edinburgh Post Office Directory (Portobello) 1873
  9. ^ Colegate's Guide to Dunoon, Kirn, and Hunter's Quay (Second edition) - John Colegate (1868), page 35
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