Simon Wilkin
English editor, Browne scholar, entomologist

Simon Wilkin

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English editor, Browne scholar, entomologist
Gender:
Male
Birth:
27 July 1790(Costessey, United Kingdom)
Death:
1862(Hampstead, United Kingdom)
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Introduction

Simon Wilkin (27 July 1790, in Costessey − 1862, in London) was an English publisher, literary scholar and naturalist whose main interest was entomology.

Life

He was the second of the three children of William Wilkin Wilkin (1762–1799), a Norfolk gristmiller, andCecilia Lucy Wilkin (d. 1796), daughter of William Jacomb of London. When his father died Wilkin moved to Norwich to live with his guardian, Joseph Kinghorn, who educated him. He was a close friend of John Curtis, William Kirby, John Burrell and William Spence who shared his interest in entomology.

Wilkin lost his inherited wealth in 1811 when the paper mill in which he was a partner failed, and in 1832 his guardian's death was another financial disaster. Bankruptcy forced the sale of his insect collection to the Zoological Society of London. He was then able toestablish a printing and publishing business in Norwich. He published the work of Harriet Martineau, Amelia Opie, George Borrow, and William Taylor. In 1825 he married Emma, daughter of John Culley of Costessey, and they had two daughters and a son and in 1834 they moved to London.

Wilkin spent thirteen years compiling a complete edition of Sir Thomas Browne (1846; reissued in 1852), for which he researched Browne'scorrespondence in the British Museum and Bodleian Library. This edition, said by Robert Southey to be "the best reprint in the English language", was reissued many times.

He was a Fellow of the Linnean Society, and a member of the Wernerian Society of Edinburgh