REPORTER S P E C I a L N O 2 T H U R S D Ay 4 O C to B E R 2012 Vol Cxliii

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

REPORTER S P E C I a L N O 2 T H U R S D Ay 4 O C to B E R 2012 Vol Cxliii CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY REPORTER S PECIAL N O 2 T HUR S D AY 4 O C TOBER 2012 VOL CXLIII FELLOWS OF THE COLLEGES 1 October 2012 CONTENTS Christ’s 3 Homerton 18 Queens’ 30 Churchill 4 Hughes Hall 19 Robinson 31 Clare 6 Jesus 20 St Catharine’s 32 Clare Hall 7 King’s 21 St Edmund’s 33 Corpus Christi 9 Lucy Cavendish 23 St John’s 35 Darwin 10 Magdalene 24 Selwyn 36 Downing 11 Murray Edwards 25 Sidney Sussex 37 Emmanuel 12 Newnham 26 Trinity 39 Fitzwilliam 14 Pembroke 27 Trinity Hall 40 Girton 15 Peterhouse 29 Wolfson 42 Gonville and Caius 17 PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY 2 FELLOWS OF THE COLLEGES [S PECIAL N O . 2 NOTE The list has been published as early as possible in the Michaelmas Term for general convenience. There may therefore be a few changes that occurred in late September which are not included here. Colleges are arranged in alphabetical order. Names are arranged in order of seniority as determined by each College, and that order in most cases depends on the date of either the first or most recent election. When a Fellow has had more than one period of tenure, a date in square brackets refers always to a first election and in parentheses to a second or subsequent election. When a date in square brackets and a date in parentheses appear together after a name, these are true dates of election and the date before the name is a notional one which confers seniority. The various entries reflect in certain respects different usages of the Colleges which have compiled them specifically for this publication. Errors of fact should be sent direct to the Senior Tutor of the College concerned. S PECIAL N O . 2] FELLOWS OF THE COLLEGES 3 CHRIST’S COLLEGE Master KELLY Francis Patrick PHD FRS Fellows 1971 JONES David Rayner Hunkin MA PHD CENG PRESIDENT 2003 EDWARDSON John Michael MA PHD 1975 KORNBERG Sir Hans Leo SCD FRS EMERITUS FELLOW TAVARÉ Simon MSC PHD FRS 1962 MUNRO Alan James MA PHD EMERITUS FELLOW 2006 VOUT Caroline MA PHD FSA 1950 YALE David Eryl Corbet MA LLB FBA HON QC READ Sophie Camilla Natalie MA PHD 1961 RATHMELL John Christopher Abbott MA PHD 2007 SHVETS Julia MSC PHD 1962 COURTNEY Cecil Patrick PHD LITTD 2008 OVEREND Mauro MSC PHD A&CE CENG MICE MSTRUCTE 1963 LANDSHOFF Peter Vincent MA PHD PUNSKAYA Elena PHD 1964 MAUNDER Charles Richard Francis MA PHD EMERITUS SECORD James Andrew MA PHD FELLOW GOYAL Sanjeev MA MBA PHD AXTON Richard Patrick MA PHD EMERITUS FELLOW MURDOCH Steven BSC PHD 1965 LLEWELLYN Robert Terence PHD EMERITUS FELLOW STIRLING Paula LLB 1966 DIAMOND Robert MA PHD EMERITUS FELLOW TWILLEY Catherine MA CAMPBELL Archibald MacRobert MA PHD THOMAS David MA MB BCHIR PHD 1969 JOHNSON Martin Hume MA PHD FRCOG FMEDSCI MARTIN Robert Simon MCHEM PHD WILSON John Stuart MA PHD SCD WONG Joyce BSC PHD NAVARATNAM Visvanathan PHD EMERITUS FELLOW 2009 TRIPPETT David MA PHD RAYNER Peter John Wynn MA PHD EMERITUS FELLOW BROWNE Helena MA PHD 1972 INGHAM Geoffrey Keith PHD THAVENTHIRAN Helen MA PHD 1974 CLIFF Andrew David MA PHD FBA 2010 BELL Duncan Stuart Alan MPHIL PHD 1975 BARKER Douglas Cameron MA PHD EMERITUS FELLOW MONIE Thomas Peter MA PHD FERGUSON Douglas Robertson MA MD EMERITUS FELLOW CUNNINGHAM John Patrick PHD 1976 LACHMANN Sir Peter Julius SCD FRCP FRCPATH FRS NYORD Rune MA DRPHIL (COPENHAGEN) FMEDSCI [1962] VARUHAS Jason Nicholas Euripide LLM PHD PETERSON Arthur William Aeneas MA PHD CIULLI Alessio PHD SEDLEY David Neil MA PHD FBA STEELE Sarah PHD 1978 BOWKETT Kelvin Malcolm MA PHD [1966] EVAN Gerard Ian PHD FRS 1983 REYNOLDS David James MA PHD FBA 2011 BALL David John MA REES William Gareth MA PHD AMIN Ash PHD FBA 1985 LESLIE Ian Malcolm PHD THOMPSON Stephen John PHD 1986 ABELL Christopher MA PHD FMEDSCI HOLSTEIN Julian BA BAYLY Susan Banks (Lady Bayly) MA PHD EDWARDS James DPHIL 1987 GAY Nicholas John Anderson PHD FRUEHWIRTH Jane PHD 1990 BATLEY John Richard MA DPHIL CLARK Rosemary Corrie PHD [2007] FITZGERALD William John MSC PHD ISAAC Joel Timothy PHD 1991 STANLEY Margaret Anne OBE BSC PHD VELLA GREGORY Isabelle MPHIL PHD 1994 KLENERMAN David MA PHD FRS WILLEY Hannah MPHIL 1996 WINTER Alan Thomas MA PHD [1975] ROBERTS Edward William PHD 1998 HUNT Robert Edward MA PHD RADCLIFFE Sarah PHD ALEXANDER Gavin Robert MA PHD 2012 FRANKLIN Sarah Brooks PHD 1999 MCNAUGHTON Peter Anthony BSC MA DPHIL [1983] LONGDON Ben John BSC PHD 2001 FIORE Marcelo Pablo PHD WADE James Palmer MA PHD PAYNE Geoffrey Stephen MA BIRCH Jonathan George MPHIL 2002 NORMAN David Bruce Percival Arthur BSC MA PHD FITZGIBBONS Jonathan Raymond DPHIL GILLARD Jonathan Harvey BSC MA MD FISCHER Andrea Mary PHD Honorary Fellows 1978 HIRSCH Sir Peter Bernhard MA PHD FRS [1960] 1996 IRVINE Rt Hon Alexander Andrew Mackay (Lord Irvine 1979 CARO Sir Anthony Alfred OM CBE MA HON LITTD of Lairg) BA LLB 1982 HUXLEY Hugh Esmor MA PHD SCD MBE FRS [1954] MCKENDRICK Neil MA FRHISTS [1958] 1984 SUPPLE Barry Emanuel CBE PHD FBA [1981] 1997 CLARKE John MA PHD SCD FRS [1972] NICHOLSON Sir Robin MA PHD FRS [1961] 1998 YEO Adrian Ning Hong MA PHD [1970] 1985 LYONS Sir John PHD LITTD FBA [1961] 2003 KING Phillip CBE MA HON LITTD RA 1988 TATE Jeffrey Philip CBE MA MB BCHIR SAUMAREZ SMITH Charles Robert CBE MA PHD FSA BAILYN Bernard [1986] SEROTA Sir Nicholas Andrew MA 1989 ZEEMAN Sir Erik Christopher MA PHD FRS WILLIAMS Most Rev and Rt Hon Rowan Douglas MA 1990 BRAITHWAITE Sir Rodric Quentin GCMG DPHIL DD PC FBA 1991 WILLIAMS Sir Dillwyn MA MB BCHIR 2004 REDMOND Mary MA BCL LLM PHD [1980] 1993 RICKS Sir Christopher Bruce BLITT MA FBA [1975] EVANS Sir Martin John MA PHD DSC FMEDSCI FRS 1995 SCHAMA Simon Michael CBE MA [1966] TURNBULL Rt Hon Andrew (Lord Turnbull) KCB CVO MA 4 FELLOWS OF THE COLLEGES [S PECIAL N O . 2 2005 PETERS Sir David Keith MA FRS PMEDSCI [1987] 2009 SKINNER Quentin Robert Duthie MA FBA [1962] CANNADINE Sir David Nicholas DPHIL LITTD FBA [1977] HAMIED Yusuf Khwaja MA PHD [2004] COLLEY Linda Jane (Lady Cannadine) CBE DPHIL FBA SMITH James Cuthbert MA PHD FRS FMEDSCI [2001] [1979] MOORE-BICK Rt Hon Sir Martin James MA PC LUCE Rt Hon Richard Napier (Lord Luce) KG GCVO PC YEO George Yong-Boon MA DL MA 2010 PELHAM Sir Hugh Reginald Brentall PHD FRS [1978] Fellow Commoners 1994 BALLARD Richard Graham John MA [1983] 2008 HALSTED Michael Peter MA PHD 1998 MARTIN Geoffrey Almeric Thorndike MA PHD LITTD FSA 2009 NORRIS Elizabeth Anne MA [2002] [1966] 2010 STEEN William Maxwell MA PHD CENG WHITE Shelby PERLMAN Michael MA 2002 SMITH Ian William Murison MA PHD FRS [1963] Bye-Fellows 1999 WEBSTER David MA DPHIL 2011 GONZALEZ Michael Angelo BMEDSCI BMBS PHD [2008] 2002 MATTHAMS Thomas James MA PHD MOSTOFI Abteen PHD 2005 ROWLAND David Edwin MA PHD 2012 CLARKE Richard William PHD 2009 JONES Susan BSC PHD [2002] HOUSDEN Michael Philip PHD WALTON Christina Lady Margaret Beaufort Fellows 2001 CAMPBELL Simon CBE PHD DSC FRSC FRS 2008 CLAPP Graham Stephen MA CAMPBELL Jill 2010 BLYTH Stephen James MA PHD 2004 WHITTAKER Guy Robert MA MBA 2012 SMITH Alan Edward PHD FRS HAWKINS Cecil MA LLB CANN Terry James 2005 HARRISON Alfred MA LYNCH Michael Richard OBE PHD CHURCHILL COLLEGE Master WALLACE Sir David James CBE FRS FRENG Fellows 1990 BROERS Rt Hon Lord Alec Nigel BA PHD SCD FRS FRENG 1976 FRASER Colin MA PHD 1996 BOYD Sir John Dixon Ikle KCMG GASKELL Philip Hedley MA PHD 1960 LIVESLEY Robert Kenneth MA BARNETT Correlli MA DSC CBE [1960] KELLY Anthony SCD FRS FRENG PHD CBE DL (1985) 1977 WOOD Hugh Bradshaw MA HAHN Frank Horace MA PHD FBA MILNE William Ireland MA FRENG HOWIE Archibald PHD CBE FRS KING Frank Haydon MA PHD 1961 HEWISH Antony MA PHD SCD FRS 1979 EDWARDS Sir Robert Geoffrey MA (HON) SCD CBE FRS STEINER Francis George PHD FBA GOLDIE Mark Adrian MA PHD 1962 CAMPBELL Richard Colin MA PHD BOLTON Malcolm David MA PHD FRENG 1963 BRUNTON John Hubert PHD 1980 ASHBURNER Michael MA PHD SCD FRS 1964 DIXON William Graham MA PHD MASCIE-TAYLOR Christopher Guy Nicholas MA PHD SCD [1964] SCHOFIELD Andrew Noel MA PHD FRS FRENG (1974) 1982 SIDDLE Kenneth MA PHD 1966 NEWBERY David Michael Garrood MA PHD SCD FBA CBE 1983 HURST Henry Robert MA CRAIG Edward John MA PHD FBA 1984 DAWES William Nicholas MA PHD WESTWOOD Brian Arthur MA PHD [1984] GREEN David Alan MA PHD (1990) 1967 WHITTLE Peter MA PHD FRS 1985 ALLEN Michael John MA OBE TRISTRAM Andrew Garth MA PHD OBE GREGORY Sir Michael John MA CBE [1968] PALMER Andrew Clennell MA PHD FRS FRENG (1990) NORRIS James Ritchie DPHIL 1968 THOMPSON John Griggs MA FRS [1987] AMARATUNGA Gehan Anil Joseph PHD FRENG (1998) SQUIRE Leonard Charles MA SCD 1987 KNOWLES Kevin Maxwell MA PHD 1969 HOSKIN Michael Anthony PHD WALTERS David Eurof MA PHD ABRAHAMS Raphael Garvin MA PHD [1987] KING Dame Julia Elizabeth MA PHD CBE FRENG DBE (2002) CRIBB Timothy John Llanwarne MA 1990 WEBBER Andrew John PHD 1970 GEORGE Hywel MA CMG OBE CHATTERJEE Vengalil Krishna Kumar MA [1972] FINCH Alison Mary MA PHD (2003) 1991 LAUGHLIN Simon Barry MA PHD FRS 1972 FINDLAY Alan Leonard Ross MA PHD VETMB 1992 JENNISON Brenda Margaret MA MBE GOUGH Douglas Owen MA PHD FRS 1993 CRISP Adrian James MA MB BCHIR MD FRCP ECHENIQUE Marcial MA DARCH OBE 1994 BRENDON Piers MA PHD FRSL 1973 WARREN Stuart George MA PHD KRAMER Matthew Henry PHD LLD RYALL Ronald Walter MA PHD KING Anny Nina MA S PECIAL N O .
Recommended publications
  • The Original Lists of Persons of Quality, Emigrants, Religious Exiles, Political
    Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924096785278 In compliance with current copyright law, Cornell University Library produced this replacement volume on paper that meets the ANSI Standard Z39.48-1992 to replace the irreparably deteriorated original. 2003 H^^r-h- CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND GIVEN IN 1891 BY HENRY WILLIAMS SAGE : ; rigmal ^ist0 OF PERSONS OF QUALITY; EMIGRANTS ; RELIGIOUS EXILES ; POLITICAL REBELS SERVING MEN SOLD FOR A TERM OF YEARS ; APPRENTICES CHILDREN STOLEN; MAIDENS PRESSED; AND OTHERS WHO WENT FROM GREAT BRITAIN TO THE AMERICAN PLANTATIONS 1600- I 700. WITH THEIR AGES, THE LOCALITIES WHERE THEY FORMERLY LIVED IN THE MOTHER COUNTRY, THE NAMES OF THE SHIPS IN WHICH THEY EMBARKED, AND OTHER INTERESTING PARTICULARS. FROM MSS. PRESERVED IN THE STATE PAPER DEPARTMENT OF HER MAJESTY'S PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE, ENGLAND. EDITED BY JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN. L n D n CHATTO AND WINDUS, PUBLISHERS. 1874, THE ORIGINAL LISTS. 1o ihi ^zmhcxs of the GENEALOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SOCIETIES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, THIS COLLECTION OF THE NAMES OF THE EMIGRANT ANCESTORS OF MANY THOUSANDS OF AMERICAN FAMILIES, IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED PY THE EDITOR, JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN. CONTENTS. Register of the Names of all the Passengers from London during One Whole Year, ending Christmas, 1635 33, HS 1 the Ship Bonavatture via CONTENTS. In the Ship Defence.. E. Bostocke, Master 89, 91, 98, 99, 100, loi, 105, lo6 Blessing .
    [Show full text]
  • York Clergy Ordinations 1374-1399
    York Clergy Ordinations 1374-1399 Edited by David M. Smith 2020 www.york.ac.uk/borthwick archbishopsregisters.york.ac.uk Online images of the Archbishops’ Registers cited in this edition can be found on the York’s Archbishops’ Registers Revealed website. The conservation, imaging and technical development work behind the digitisation project was delivered thanks to funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Register of Alexander Neville 1374-1388 Register of Thomas Arundel 1388-1396 Sede Vacante Register 1397 Register of Robert Waldby 1397 Sede Vacante Register 1398 Register of Richard Scrope 1398-1405 YORK CLERGY ORDINATIONS 1374-1399 Edited by DAVID M. SMITH 2020 CONTENTS Introduction v Ordinations held 1374-1399 vii Editorial notes xiv Abbreviations xvi York Clergy Ordinations 1374-1399 1 Index of Ordinands 169 Index of Religious 249 Index of Titles 259 Index of Places 275 INTRODUCTION This fifth volume of medieval clerical ordinations at York covers the years 1374 to 1399, spanning the archiepiscopates of Alexander Neville, Thomas Arundel, Robert Waldby and the earlier years of Richard Scrope, and also including sede vacante ordinations lists for 1397 and 1398, each of which latter survive in duplicate copies. There have, not unexpectedly, been considerable archival losses too, as some later vacancy inventories at York make clear: the Durham sede vacante register of Alexander Neville (1381) and accompanying visitation records; the York sede vacante register after Neville’s own translation in 1388; the register of Thomas Arundel (only the register of his vicars-general survives today), and the register of Robert Waldby (likewise only his vicar-general’s register is now extant) have all long disappeared.1 Some of these would also have included records of ordinations, now missing from the chronological sequence.
    [Show full text]
  • RBNA Draft Catalogue
    King's College London Archives RBNA KING’S COLLEGE LONDON COLLEGE ARCHIVES Royal British Nurses Association Records RBNA1-4 Royal British Nursing Association Minute books and membership records RBNA1/1-6 Minutes of meetings of the General Council of the Royal British Nursing Association, 1887-1961 RBNA1/1 1887 Dec 1 – Minutes of meetings of the General Council of the 1894 Oct 19 Royal British Nursing Association. Volume. RBNA1/2 1895 Jan 11 – Minutes of meetings of the General Council of the 1902 Apr 25 Royal British Nursing Association. Volume. RBNA1/3 1902 May 14 - Minutes of meetings of the General Council of the 1918 Sept 27 Royal British Nursing Association. Volume. RBNA1/4 1918 Oct 26 – Minutes of meetings of the General Council of the 1923 Jan 25 Royal British Nursing Association. Volume. RBNA1/5 1923 Apr 26 – Minutes of meetings of the General Council of the 1931 Apr 24 Royal British Nursing Association. Volume. RBNA1/6 1931 Jul 17 – Minutes of meetings of the General Council of the 1961 Oct 20 Royal British Nursing Association. Volume. Also contains the minutes of the annual general meetings from 1947. Minutes of meetings of the Council after 1961 can be found in RBNA3/16- 17. RBNA2/1-2 Minutes of the annual general meetings of the Royal British Nursing Association, 1889-1911 RBNA2/1 1889 Jun 15 – Minutes of the annual general meetings of the 1911 Dec 11 Royal British Nursing Association. Volume. RBNA2/2 1917 Jun 17 – Minutes of the annual general meetings of the 1946 Jun 28 Royal British Nursing Association.
    [Show full text]
  • Timeline1800 18001600
    TIMELINE1800 18001600 Date York Date Britain Date Rest of World 8000BCE Sharpened stone heads used as axes, spears and arrows. 7000BCE Walls in Jericho built. 6100BCE North Atlantic Ocean – Tsunami. 6000BCE Dry farming developed in Mesopotamian hills. - 4000BCE Tigris-Euphrates planes colonized. - 3000BCE Farming communities spread from south-east to northwest Europe. 5000BCE 4000BCE 3900BCE 3800BCE 3760BCE Dynastic conflicts in Upper and Lower Egypt. The first metal tools commonly used in agriculture (rakes, digging blades and ploughs) used as weapons by slaves and peasant ‘infantry’ – first mass usage of expendable foot soldiers. 3700BCE 3600BCE © PastSearch2012 - T i m e l i n e Page 1 Date York Date Britain Date Rest of World 3500BCE King Menes the Fighter is victorious in Nile conflicts, establishes ruling dynasties. Blast furnace used for smelting bronze used in Bohemia. Sumerian civilization developed in south-east of Tigris-Euphrates river area, Akkadian civilization developed in north-west area – continual warfare. 3400BCE 3300BCE 3200BCE 3100BCE 3000BCE Bronze Age begins in Greece and China. Egyptian military civilization developed. Composite re-curved bows being used. In Mesopotamia, helmets made of copper-arsenic bronze with padded linings. Gilgamesh, king of Uruk, first to use iron for weapons. Sage Kings in China refine use of bamboo weaponry. 2900BCE 2800BCE Sumer city-states unite for first time. 2700BCE Palestine invaded and occupied by Egyptian infantry and cavalry after Palestinian attacks on trade caravans in Sinai. 2600BCE 2500BCE Harrapan civilization developed in Indian valley. Copper, used for mace heads, found in Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine and Egypt. Sumerians make helmets, spearheads and axe blades from bronze.
    [Show full text]
  • The Anglo-Saxon and Norman "Eigenkirche" and the Ecclesiastical Policy of William I
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 1981 The Anglo-Saxon and Norman "Eigenkirche" and the Ecclesiastical Policy of William I. Albert Simeon Cote Jr Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Cote, Albert Simeon Jr, "The Anglo-Saxon and Norman "Eigenkirche" and the Ecclesiastical Policy of William I." (1981). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 3675. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/3675 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This was produced from a copy of a document sent to us for microfilming. While the most advanced technological means to photograph and reproduce this document have been used, the quality is heavily dependent upon the quality of the material submitted. The following explanation of techniques is provided to help you understand markings or notations which may appear on this reproduction. 1. The sign or “target" for pages apparently lacking from the document photographed is “ Missing Page(s)". If it was possible to obtain the missing page(s) or section, they are spliced into the film along with adjacent pages. This may have necessitated cutting through an image and duplicating adjacent pages to assure you of complete continuity. 2. When an image on the film is obliterated with a round black mark it is an indication that the film inspector noticed either blurred copy because of movement during exposure, or duplicate copy.
    [Show full text]
  • Pohl, B., & Allen, R. (2020). Rewriting the Gesta Normannorum Ducum At
    Pohl, B. , & Allen, R. (2020). Rewriting the Gesta Normannorum ducum at Saint-Victor in the Fifteenth Century: Simon de Plumetot’s Brevis cronica compendiosa ducum Normannie. Traditio, 75, 385-435. https://doi.org/10.1017/tdo.2020.12 Peer reviewed version Link to published version (if available): 10.1017/tdo.2020.12 Link to publication record in Explore Bristol Research PDF-document This is the author accepted manuscript (AAM). The final published version (version of record) is available online via Cambridge University https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/traditio/article/rewriting-the-gesta- normannorum-ducum-in-the-fifteenth-century-simon-de-plumetots-brevis-cronica-compendiosa-ducum- normannie/310B7EAF9E26CA8DADF7A6C7EE1B1E23 . Please refer to any applicable terms of use of the publisher. University of Bristol - Explore Bristol Research General rights This document is made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the reference above. Full terms of use are available: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/red/research-policy/pure/user-guides/ebr-terms/ 1 REWRITING THE GESTA NORMANNORUM DUCUM IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY: SIMON DE PLUMETOT’S BREVIS CRONICA COMPENDIOSA DUCUM NORMANNIE* BY BENJAMIN POHL and RICHARD ALLEN This article is dedicated to Liesbeth van Houts, editor of the Gesta Normannorum ducum, generous mentor, colleague, and friend. This article offers an analysis, edition, and translation of the Brevis croniCa Compendiosa ducum Normannie, a historiographical account of the dukes of Normandy and their deeds, written at the turn of the fifteenth century by the Norman jurist and man of letters, Simon de Plumetot (1371–1443). Having all but escaped the attention of modern scholars, this study is the first to examine and publish the Brevis croniCa.
    [Show full text]
  • Anglo-Saxon Food: Processing & Consumption
    ANGLO-SAXON FOOD: PROCESSING & CONSUMPTION ANN HAGEN MASTER OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON ProQuest Number: 10611196 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest ProQuest 10611196 Published by ProQuest LLC(2017). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States C ode Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106- 1346 ANGLO-SAXON FOOD: PROCESSING & CONSUMPTION ABSTRACT This synthesizing study brings together for the first time information from various primary and secondary sources in order to build up a composite picture of food processing and consumption during the Anglo-Saxon period. The period covered is the six centuries from the beginning of the fifth century to c.1100. The area covered is Anglo-Saxon England, with reference to the Celtic west. Occasionally reference is made to continental sites for archaeological evidence to verify points in the literary sources, when, by the accidents of (non) recovery, such evidence is unknown in the archaeological record here. The primary source material is of two kinds: literary and archaeological. Material in Anglo-Saxon manuscripts in the vernacular has been supplemented on occasion by that in Latin manuscripts. There was no pre-selection of manuscripts, and references to food come from all types of writings: legal, religious, literary and medical.
    [Show full text]
  • This Lucid New Translation of the Writings of Richard Methley Offers an Intoxicating, Not to Say Spiritually Inebriated, Account of His Search for Union with God
    “This lucid new translation of the writings of Richard Methley offers an intoxicating, not to say spiritually inebriated, account of his search for union with God. An assiduous reader and translator of earlier contemplative texts, he blends together the languor of Richard Rolle, the apophatic austerity of the Cloud-author, the theological intensity of Heinrich Suso and the devotio moderna, and the liquefying ardour of Marguerite Porete. The resulting synthesis produces a new, urgently prophetic voice of meltingly eloquent spiritual longing existing in transcendent tension with the structures of his daily life as a Carthusian.” —Vincent Gillespie J.R.R. Tolkien Professor of English University of Oxford “This book makes available in modern English one of the most significant contributions to the contemplative tradition of fifteenth- century England. By fusing in such a sophisticated way the apophatic and the cataphatic approaches to the contemplative life as part of his experience, Methley’s writings challenge our contemporary desire for categorization and division. The excellent translations by Barbara Newman bring to light the daily mystical experiences and the pastoral concerns of a Carthusian monk following a strict monastic life. Her notes and the outstanding general introduction by Laura Saetveit Miles provide a wealth of information about the rich religious tradition from which Methley’s corpus emerged.” —Denis Renevey Professor of Medieval English Language and Literature University of Lausanne “Newman and Miles have set the table for an affective mystical feast! Laden with elaborate metaphor and devout hyperbole, the works of Richard Methley translated here offer an extraordinarily intimate perspective on late-medieval Carthusian mysticism in England.” —Steven Rozenski University of Rochester, New York “Barbara Newman’s translation of Richard Methley’s original Latin and Middle English works brings this important but little-known mystical writer to wider attention.
    [Show full text]
  • The Episcopate of Walter Langton, Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, 1296-1321
    "THE EPISCOPATE OF WALTER LANGTON, BISHOP OF COVENTRY AND LICHFIELD, 1296-1321, WITH IA CALENDAR OF HIS REGISTER" by Jill Blackwell Hughes, BA Thesis submitted to the University of Nottingham for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, October, 1992. CONTENTS. ABSTRACT vi ACKNOWLEDGMENTS viii NOTE ON EDITORIAL METHOD x LISTS OF ABBREVIATIONS I. Words xii II. Publications, repositories and manuscripts xiv INTRODUCTION 1. The Register 1 I. The First Lichfield Episcopal Register 1 II. The Condition of the Register 8 III. The Structure of the Register 10 i. The First Four Folios 10 ii. The Arrangement of the Remainder of the Register 32 IV. The Marginalia 42 V. The Ordination Lists 44 VI. Licences for Non-Residence 73 2. The Diocese 84 I. The Extent of the Diocese 84 II. The Administration of the Diocese 88 i. The Local Administration 88 a. The Archdeaconries and Archdeacons 88 The Archdeaconry of Chester 91 The Archdeaconry of Coventry 101 ii The Archdeaconry of Derby 108 The Archdeaconry of Shrewsbury 115 The Archdeaconry of Stafford 119 b. The Rural Deans 122 C. Exempt Jurisdictions 127 ii. The Central Administration 134 a. The Vicars-General 134 b. The Chancellor 163 c. The Official 167 d. The Commissary-General and Sequestrator-General 172 III. The Administration of the Diocese during the Sequestration of the See, 30 March 1302 -8 June 1303 186 3. Walter Langton 198 I. Langton's Family Background 198 II. Langton's Early Career 213 III. Langton's Election as Bishop 224 IV. Langton, the Diplomat and Politician 229 V. Langton, the Bishop 268 VI.
    [Show full text]
  • The Commemoration of Saints at Late Medieval York Minster
    The Commemoration of Saints at Late Medieval York Minster Three case studies of the relations between the depictions and accounts of saints’ legends in stained glass windows, liturgical and hagiographic texts Universiteit Utrecht Research Master Thesis Medieval Studies Fenna Visser Student number: 0313890 Supervisors: dr. H.G.E. Rose & dr. T. van Bueren 15 August 2008 2 Contents Abbreviations .......................................................................................................................................... 4 List of Illustrations .................................................................................................................................. 5 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................. 8 Chapter 1: York Minster: organization and building ............................................................................... 13 Function and organization ................................................................................................................. 13 Architectural history .......................................................................................................................... 19 Chapter 2: Saints’ lives in late medieval England ................................................................................... 22 Hagiography: legends of the saints .................................................................................................... 22 Hagiography
    [Show full text]
  • THE FALL of ORTHODOX ENGLAND the Spiritual Roots of the Norman Conquest, 1043-1087
    THE FALL OF ORTHODOX ENGLAND The Spiritual Roots of the Norman Conquest, 1043-1087 Vladimir Moss © Vladimir Moss, 2007 FOREWORD ................................................................................................................4 INTRODUCTION: ENGLAND AND THE CONTINENT ...................................6 The Beginning of the End .......................................................................................6 The Rise of the Heretical Papacy .........................................................................8 The Growth of Feudalism....................................................................................11 The English Monarchy..........................................................................................16 Rome and the Holy Roman Empire....................................................................20 The Papal Reform Movement .............................................................................24 The Rise of the Normans......................................................................................28 The Challenge Facing the English.......................................................................30 1. SAINT EDWARD THE CONFESSOR (1043-1066)...........................................31 Early Years.............................................................................................................31 Years in Exile .........................................................................................................34 Edward the King....................................................................................................36
    [Show full text]
  • Twelfth-Century English Queens: Charters and Authority
    1 Twelfth-century English queens: charters and authority M. Phil. Medieval History 2010 Lida Sophia Townsley, B.A., M.A. Supervised by: Dr. David Ditchburn and Dr. Peter Crooks Trinity College, Dublin 2 Declaration of originality I hereby declare that this thesis has not been submitted as an exercise for a degree at this or any other university, and that it is entirely the work of my own research, except as cited in reference. _____________________________________________ 3 Summary This thesis examines the authority of the first five English queens of the twelfth century, as seen through the English charters from this period. Surveying the charters issued by, witnessed by, and mentioning Matilda of Scotland, Adeliza of Louvain, Matilda of Boulogne, Empress Matilda, and Eleanor of Aquitaine provides a glimpse into the authority held and exercised by each. The definition for authority employed for this investigation includes a provision concerning not only actions but also means of action. Those means of action are seen here as preconditions for authority. Three preconditions are analyzed, namely alliances through dowries, land through dowers, and wealth through Queen's Gold. Once this basis for authority has been established, the authority itself is appraised. The charters are divided into two main categories for this study: those the queens issued themselves, and those they witnessed. The charters for which a queen was 'actor' are examined first, numerically, chronologically, and contextually, with a clear emphasis on the beneficiaries. Then, the charters witnessed by each queen are examined, based on the same criteria. What this material together shows is that there was little of a defined role for the queens in the administration of the kingdom, and that they all exercised their authority, to varying extents and at diverse periods of their reign.
    [Show full text]