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D

D:: The symbol employed to designate the Deuteronomic school of writers whose work, according to the critical school, is found not only in Deuteronomy, but in the historical books from Judges to II Kings, except Ruth. See HEBREW LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE, II., § 4.

DABNEY, ROBERT LEWIS: American Presbyterian (Southern); b. in Louisa County, Va., Mar. 5, 1820; d. at Austin, Tex., Jan. 3, 1898. He studied at Hampden-Sidney College, Va., and the University of Virginia. (M.A., 1842), and was graduated at Union Theological Seminary, Hampden-Sidney, Va., in 1846. He was then a missionary in Louisa County, Va., 1846-47, and pastor at Tinkling Spring, Va., 1847-53, being also head master of a classical school for a portion of this time. From 1853 to 1859 he was professor of ecclesiastical history and polity and from 1859 to 1869 adjunct professor of systematic theology in Union Theological Seminary, Va. He then became full professor of the latter subject and held this position until 1883, when he was appointed professor of mental and moral philosophy in the University of Texas. In 1894 failing health compelled him to retire from active life, although he still lectured occasionally. He was copastor of the Hampden-Sidney College Church 1858-74, also serving Hampden-Sidney College in a professorial capacity on occasions of vacancies in its faculty. During the vacation of 1861 he was chaplain of the Virginia troops in the Confederate army, and in the following year was chief of staff to "Stonewall" Jackson in the brilliant Valley Campaign. While at the University of Texas be practically founded and maintained the Austin School of Theology, and in 1870 was moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, South. In theology he was a conservative. He wrote Memoir of Rev. Dr. Francis S. Sampson (Richmond, 1855), whose commentary on Hebrews he likewise edited (New York, 1857); Life of General Thomas J. Jackson (1866); Defense of Virginia and the South (1867); Treatise on Sacred Rhetoric (Richmond, 1870); Theology, Dogmatic and Polemic (1871); Sensualistic Philosophy of the Nineteenth Century Examined (New York, 1875); Practical Philosophy (Mexico, Mo., 1896); and the posthumous Penal Character of the Atonement of Christ Discussed in the Light of Recent Popular Heresies (Richmond, 1898). A number of his shorter essays have been edited by C. R. Vaughan under the title Discussions (vols. i.-iii., Richmond, 1890-92; vol. iv., Mexico, Mo., 1897).

BIBLIOGRAPHY: T. C. Johnson, Life and Letters of Robert Lewis Dabney, Richmond, 1903.

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