Edmund Venables (5 July 1819 in Queenhithe, London – 5 March 1895 in Lincoln) was an English cleric and antiquarian.
Venables was ordained deacon by Ashurst Gilbert, the bishop of Chichester in 1844, as curate to Archdeacon Julius Hare, rector of Hurstmonceux in Sussex, and remained there until 1853. In 1846 he was ordained priest by Edward Stanley, the bishop of Norwich. From 1853 to 1855 he was curate at Bonchurch in the Isle of Wight, and for some years after 1855 he remained there, taking pupils.
Venables was appointed by Bishop John Jackson as his examining chaplain at Lincoln, and continued in that position when his diocesan was translated to London in 1869. In 1865 Jackson appointed him to the prebendal stall of Carlton with Thurlby in Lincoln Cathedral, and in 1867 precentor and canon-residentiary of the cathedral.
Venables died at the Precentory, Lincoln, on 5 March 1895.
In 1845 Venables became a member of the Royal Archæological Institute, and contributed papers to its journal. While in the Isle of Wight he compiled, with the assistance of local naturalists, a guide to the island, which was published in 1860. In 1867 he brought out, mainly bases on that book, a smaller Guide to the Undercliff of the Isle of Wight. The city of Lincoln inspired papers by Venables, including lectures: A Walk through the Minster, and two series of Walks through the Streets of Lincoln. An essay by him on Lincoln Cathedral was included in 1893 in Our English Minsters, and printed separately in 1898. He edited in 1882 the fourth edition of Murray's Handbook for Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and Somersetshire, and published in that year a Historical Sketch of Bere Regis, Dorset.
Four addresses on The Church of England delivered in Lincoln Cathedral in September 1886 were published by Venables that year. He was a major contributor to William Smith's Dictionary of the Bible, Dictionary of Christian Antiquities, and Dictionary of Christian Biography; also to the Encyclopædia Britannica, "Abbey" (article), Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th and 10th editions (1875-89; 1902-03). Retrieved 4 September 2022. "Abbot" (article), Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th and 10th editions (1875-89; 1902-03). Retrieved 4 September 2022. John Kitto's Biblical Encyclopædia, and the Dictionary of National Biography. He was a frequent writer in the Saturday Review, The Athenæum, The Guardian, and Good Words.
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