Background
Yeatman married Charlotte McDonough, daughter of Captain Alan McDonough, of Athgarvan Lodge, Curragh, Ireland.
(The Shemetic origin of the nations of western Europe and ...)
The Shemetic origin of the nations of western Europe and more especially of the English, French, and Irish branches of the Gaelic race. This book, "The Shemetic origin of the nations of western Europe", by John Pym Yeatman, is a replication of a book originally published before 1879. It has been restored by human beings, page by page, so that you may enjoy it in a form as close to the original as possible.
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Yeatman married Charlotte McDonough, daughter of Captain Alan McDonough, of Athgarvan Lodge, Curragh, Ireland.
He has been described as "outspoken, quarrelsome, no respecter of rank and reputation and cursed with a self-destructive streak". Yeatman obtained a degree in law at Emmanuel College, Cambridge and later became a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, he authored several successful works on law and history. His An Introduction to the Study of Early English History (1874) was widely read upon its release and received favourable reviews by historians.
Yeatman worked as a lawyer in the Midlands Circuit, but resigned after a dispute in which he supported another lawyer
When he applied for readmission, he was rejected. Blaming Lord Esher for his woes, Yeatman accused him of participation with others in a "conspiracy to destroy his career", claiming "an additional 10,000 pounds for alleged slander from the bench".
He was unsuccessful. Yeatman pursued his vendetta against Esher in The Judicature Quarterly Review, only one issue of which ever appeared, published in January 1896 and entirely written by Yeatman.
The contents were noted for "pouring vitriol over all and sundry", but especially Esher. In his book The Gentle Shakspere: A Vindication, Yeatman attempted to prove that Shakespeare was a devout Roman Catholic whose works communicated his beliefs and who hated Queen Elizabeth.
He also claimed that Shakespeare could not have written the sonnets because they were irreligious. Yeatman wrote the 300 page work in three weeks with, he admitted, only little research, saying "I have written this book with very little preparation, and with only a previous very general knowledge of the works of Shakspere".
Critics were scathing, citing numerous errors.
(The Shemetic origin of the nations of western Europe and ...)
(This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curat...)
(This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of th...)
(Lang:- eng, Pages 325. Reprinted in 2015 with the help of...)