Sir William Ridgeway etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Sir William Ridgeway etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

1 Şubat 2008 Cuma

Cambridge and the Managing Committee

Cambridge and the Managing Committee

Cambridge was well represented on the Managing Committee. Professor Percy Gardner (1846-1937) was a member of the first committee: at the time he was holding the Disney chair in Archaeology (1880-87). (He was elected to the Lincoln and Merton chair in Classical Archaeology at Oxford in 1887.) This was not a demanding position. He recalled:
Though technically a Professorship, the Disney post was in fact only a lectureship, involving no residence, but only the delivery of six lectures in the year. These lectures I could easily arrange to give in time of vacation from the [British] Museum: so the Trustees allowed me to keep my post, thinking it desirable to establish a fresh line of communication between the Universities and the Museum.
(Autobiographica, 52)

A significant Cambridge influence on the Managing Committee was Richard Claverhouse Jebb (1841-1905) who was on the original Managing Committee and then a Trustee. He returned to Cambridge in 1889 as holder of the Regius chair of Greek. John Edwin Sandys (1844-1922) was also on the original committee with Jebb and subsequently the University of Cambridge nominee (replacing Ridgeway in 1904/05). Sandys was elected a Fellow of St John's College in 1867: he also served as the university's public orator (1876-1919).

James Smith Reid (1846-1926) was elected a Fellow of Christ's College in 1869 (until his marriage in 1872), and subsequently a Fellow at Gonville & Caius College (from 1878). He held the chair of Ancient History from 1899 (until 1925). His wife, Ruth, was a sister of Ernest and Percy Gardner. Reid's sister, Agnes, married Percy Gardner (who was Reid's exact contemporary at the City of London School).

Charles Waldstein (later Sir Charles Walston) (1856-1927) had moved to Cambridge as a lecturer in 1880. He was Reader in Classical Archaeology (1883-1907). (His successor was A.B. Cook [1868-1952]). Waldstein simultaneously served as Director of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens (1888-92) during which time he excavated at the Argive Heraion. He also held the Slade chair of Art in Cambridge (1895-1901, 1904-11).

Leonard Whibley (1863-1941) was elected to a fellowship at Pembroke College in 1889. In addition he was university lecturer in Ancient History (1899-1910).

William Ridgeway was appointed to the Disney chair in 1892. He was the first nominee of the University of Cambridge on the Managing Committee (from 1896). His position in Cambridge was strengthened in 1907 by his appointment to the Brereton Readership in classics. He was particularly influential on Cambridge classical archaeology with many of his students going out to Athens.

One of the longest standing members of the Managing Committee (latterly as nominee of the Hellenic Socity) was Jane Ellen Harrison (1850-1928). She was a research fellow at Newnham College from 1898 and strongly encouraged female students to travel to Greece as part of their studies.

28 Ocak 2008 Pazartesi

Cambridge students and the influence of Sir William Ridgeway

Cambridge students and the influence of Sir William Ridgeway

(Sir) William Ridgeway was appointed Disney Professor at Cambridge in 1892 (in succession to Percy Gardner). He was to be a major influence on Cambridge students especially in the field of prehistory.

Among the students who are likely to have been influenced by him up to the First World War are, in order of study:
  • Robert Carr Bosanquet: Trinity College, Part 2 1894.
  • Frank Russell Earp: King's College, Part 2 1894.
  • Frederick Arthur Charles Morrison: Jesus College, Part 2 1896.
  • John Cuthbert Lawson: Pembroke College, Part 2 1897.
  • Charles Douglas Edmonds: Emmanuel College, Part 2 1898.
  • Clement Gutch: King's College, Part 2 1898.
  • Solomon Charles Kaines Smith: Magdalene College, Part 2 1898.
  • John Hubert Marshall: King's College, Part 2 1900.
  • Frederick William Hasluck: King's College, Part 2 1901.
  • Richard McGillivray Dawkins: Emmanuel College, Part 2 1902.
  • John Laurence Stokes: Pembroke College, BA 1902.
  • Alan John Bayard Wace: Pembroke College, Part 2 1902.
  • John Percival Droop: Trinity College, Part 2 1904.
  • Henry Julius Wetenhall Tillyard: Gonville & Caius College, Part 2 1904.
  • Wilfred Jerome Farrell: Jesus College, Part 2 1905.
  • Arnold Wycombe Gomme: Trinity College, Part 2 1908.
  • Lawrence Berkley Tillard: St John's College, BA 1909.
  • Eustace Mandeville Wetenhall Tillyard: Jesus College, Part 2 1911.
  • Max Ludwig Wolfram Laistner: Jesus College, Part 2 1912.
  • Cecil Allison Scutt: Clare College, Part 2 1912.
Among them are three directors (Bosanquet, Dawkins, Wace).