, a native of Nottingham, and a member of Peter-house, Cambridge,
, a native of Nottingham, and a
member of Peter-house, Cambridge, became attached to
the nonjurors, and accepted the office of librarian to the
celebrated Jeremy Collyer. While he was at Peter-house
he printed a translation of “Martyn’s Answers to Emlyn,
”
Studiorum Primitiae
” namely,
“S. Justini Martyris cum Tryphone Dialogus,
” Bibliotheca Literaria,
” a learned work, of which
only ten numbers were printed, and in which are interspersed the observations of Masson, Wasse, and other
eminent scholars of the time. He also published, 1. “De
Vita & Rebus gestis Marise Scotorum Regina?, Francise
Dotarice.
” “The History of the Life and Reign of Mary
Queen of Scots and Dowager of France, extracted from
original records and writers of credit,
” 1725, 8vo. 2. Art
edition of “Aristides,
” with notes, Joannis Caii Britanni de Canibus Britannicis
liber unus; de variorum Animalium & Stirpium, &c. liber
unus; de Libris propriis liber unus; de Pronunciatione
Græcæ & Latinæ Linguæ, cum scriptione nova, libellus;
ad optimorum exemplarium fidem recogniti; à S. Jebb,
M. D.
” London, Opus Majus,
” folio, neatly and accurately printed for
W. Bowyer, 1733. 5. “Humphr. Hodii, lib. 2. de Græcis
illustribus Linguæ Græcæ Literarumque humaniorum instauratoribus,
” &c. Lond. Præmittitur de
Vita & Scriptis ipsius Humphredi Dissertatio, auctore S.
Jebb, M. D.
” He wrote also the epitaph inscribed on a,
small pyramid between Haut-Buisson and Marquise, in the
road to Boulogne, about seven miles from Calais, in memory of Edward Seabright, esq. of Croxton in Norfolk,
three other English gentlemen, and two servants, who were
all murdered Sept. 20, 1723. The pyramid, being decayed, was taken down about 1751, and a small oratory or
chapel erected on the side of the road. In 1749, Dr.
Jebb possessed all Mr. Bridges’s Mss. relative to the
“History of Northamptonshire,
” which were afterwards
bought by sir Thomas Cave, bart. and finally digested,
and published in 2 vols. folio, by the rev. Peter Whalley,
in 1791. Dr. Jebb practised at Stratford with great success till within a few years of his death, when he retired
with a moderate fortune into Derbyshire, where he died
March 9, 1772, leaving several children, one of whom is
the subject of the next article. He was uncle to the preceding Dr. John Jebb.