Quarterly Review

Quarterly Review, a review started by John Murray, the celebrated London publisher, in February 1809, in rivalry with the Edinburgh, which had been seven years in possession of the field, and was exerting, as he judged, an evil influence on public opinion; in this enterprise he was seconded by Southey and Scott, the more cordially that the Edinburgh had given offence to the latter by its criticism of “Marmion.” It was founded in the Tory interest for the defence of Church and State, and it had Gifford for its first editor, while the contributors included, besides Southey and Scott, all the ablest literary celebrities on the Tory side, of which the most zealous and frequent was John Wilson Croker.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Quarter-staff * Quartermaster
[wait for the fun]
Quain, Richard
Quain, Sir Richard
Quair
Quakers
Quarantine
Quarles, Francis
Quarter Days
Quarter-deck
Quarter-Sessions
Quarter-staff
Quarterly Review
Quartermaster
Quartette
Quarto
Quasimodo Sunday
Quass
Quatre-Bras
Quatrefages de Bréau
Quatremère, Étienne Marc
Quatremère de Quincy
Quatro Cento

Nearby

Links here from Chalmers

Courayer, Peter Francis
Evelyn, John
Ford, John
Herrick, Robert
Robespierre, Maximilian Isidore
Tooke, John Horne
Warburton, William