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Southern was born in [[Newcastle-upon-Tyne]] and educated at the Royal Grammar School there and at Balliol College, Oxford where he graduated with a first-class honours degree in History. At Oxford Southern's mentors were Sir Maurice Powicke and V H Galbraith. He was a Fellow of Balliol from 1937-61 (where he lectured alongside Christopher Hill) , [[Henry Chichele|Chichele]] Professor of Modern History at Oxford from 1961-9, and President of [[St John’s College, Oxford]], from 1969-81. He was knighted in 1974. He died in Oxford.
Southern was born in [[Newcastle-upon-Tyne]] and educated at the Royal Grammar School there and at Balliol College, Oxford where he graduated with a first-class honours degree in History. At Oxford Southern's mentors were Sir Maurice Powicke and V H Galbraith. He was a Fellow of Balliol from 1937-61 (where he lectured alongside Christopher Hill) , [[Henry Chichele|Chichele]] Professor of Modern History at Oxford from 1961-9, and President of [[St John’s College, Oxford]], from 1969-81. He was knighted in 1974. He died in Oxford.


Southern's Making of the Middle Ages (1953) established his reputation as a medievalist of the first rank. This pioneering work opened up new vistas in medieval history and it has been translated into many languages. Southern's studies of St Anselm and Robert Grosseteste have redefined the historigraphical landscape.
Southern's [[Making of the Middle Ages]] (1953) established his reputation as a medievalist of the first rank. This pioneering work opened up new vistas in medieval history and it has been translated into many languages. Southern's studies of St Anselm and Robert Grosseteste have redefined the historigraphical landscape.


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==

Revision as of 22:59, 26 August 2005

Sir Richard W. Southern (1912-2001) was a notable medieval historian, based at the University of Oxford.

Southern was born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne and educated at the Royal Grammar School there and at Balliol College, Oxford where he graduated with a first-class honours degree in History. At Oxford Southern's mentors were Sir Maurice Powicke and V H Galbraith. He was a Fellow of Balliol from 1937-61 (where he lectured alongside Christopher Hill) , Chichele Professor of Modern History at Oxford from 1961-9, and President of St John’s College, Oxford, from 1969-81. He was knighted in 1974. He died in Oxford.

Southern's Making of the Middle Ages (1953) established his reputation as a medievalist of the first rank. This pioneering work opened up new vistas in medieval history and it has been translated into many languages. Southern's studies of St Anselm and Robert Grosseteste have redefined the historigraphical landscape.

Bibliography

  • The Making of the Middle Ages (1953)
  • Medieval Humanism: And Other Studies
  • St Anselm and his Biographer (1963)
  • Robert Grosseteste: The Growth of an English Mind in Medieval Europe
  • St. Anselm: A Portrait in a Landscape
  • Western Society and the Church in the Middle Ages (1970)
  • Western Views of Islam in the Middle Ages