George Herbert Moberly (1837 – 30 April 1895) was an English priest, academic, and author.
The eldest son of
George Moberly, later
Bishop of Salisbury, and his wife Mary Ann, Moberly was born in
Winchester. In 1855, aged 18, he matriculated at
Corpus Christi College, Oxford, where he was a scholar. He graduated BA in 1859[1] and in 1860 won the Ellerton Theological Prize.[2] He graduated MA in 1861, but kept his scholarship until 1864, when he was elected a
fellow of his college. He held the fellowship until 1870, and from 1869 to 1871 was a tutor, chaplain, and lecturer in law and modern history, at the
University of Bonn.[1]
Moberly died at Cintra House, Winchester, on 30 April 1895, leaving a widow, Esther.[3]
Selected publications
Life and Immortality brought to light by the Gospel, an essay which obtained the Ellerton Theological Prize in the University of Oxford, 1860 (Oxford: J. Vincent, 1860)
^George Herbert Moberly, Life and Immortality brought to light by the Gospel, an essay which obtained the Ellerton Theological Prize in the University of Oxford, 1860 (Oxford: J. Vincent, 1860)
^
ab"MOBERLY the reverend George Herbert of Cintra House Winchester clerk... £1037 8s. 3d." in Wills and Administrations (England and Wales) 1895 (1896), p. 287