Noël Oakeshott: Difference between revisions
→Family: marriage details |
|||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
==Family== |
==Family== |
||
Noël Moon married the educational administrator and historian Walter Oakeshott in April 1928 at [[Aston Tirrold]]. The engagement from 1926 was prolonged by Walter's need to move from his position at [[Bec School]]; an operation for chronic appendicitis he had; and opposition and stalling tactics from her wealthy father, who considered that Walter's social position was inadequate.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dancy |first1=John |title=Walter Oakeshott: A diversity of gifts |date=1995 |publisher=Michael Russell |pages=45–46 |language=en}}</ref> |
|||
She was the sister of [[Edward Penderel Moon]], and married educational administrator and art historian [[Walter Oakeshott]] in 1928. Beazley named the so-called Oakeshott painter after the couple. |
|||
Beazley named the so-called Oakeshott painter after the couple. |
|||
==Notes== |
==Notes== |
Revision as of 08:55, 28 February 2020
Noël Rose Oakeshott, née Moon (1904–1976) was a British classical archaeologist.
Life
She was the daughter of the physician Robert Oswald Moon and his wife Ethel Waddington (died 1933), daughter of Major-General Thomas Waddington of Pangbourne, and sister of Penderel Moon the historian.[1][2][3] Her mother was a suffragist and artist.[4]
Noël was a pupil at the Farmhouse School, Mayortorne Manor near Wendover, run by Isabel Fry;[5] her mother had known Constance Masefield (née Crommelin), Fry's friend, during the 1890s.[4] There she learned Latin, and was taught Greek individually at her father's request. She acted there in a production of Iphigenia in Tauris, in Gilbert Murray's translation.[6] She entered the University of Oxford as a non-college student, lodging with David George Hogarth. Following the Literae humaniores course from 1922, she completed "Mods". She was then advised to transfer to the Diploma in Classical Archaeology.[5] In this early period at Oxford, Richard Hughes wooed her by letter.[7]
Socially, she met at this time classical scholars including Cyril Bailey. She fell in with Balliol College students, through Hugh Keen, father of Maurice Keen.[5][8] In 1926 she acted the role of Leader of the chorus in a Balliol production of Hippolytus. The title role was played by Walter Oakeshott, who proposed marriage to her at the end of the year.[5]
In 1926, also, Noël was the top student in the Diploma in Classical Archaeology, and was awarded the Gilchrist Scholarship to the British School at Rome.[5] She was there for four months from January 1927. With the support of John Beazley she worked on Greek vases from southern Italy.[7]
Noël applied Beazley's method of separation of individual painters to Italian vase painting. It was an application of connoisseurship, and some attributions have been reconsidered since.[9]
Works and influence
Noël Oakeshott's essay Some Early South Italian Vase-Painters. With a brief indication of the later history of Italiote vase-painting from 1929 remains a basic work in the field. The pioneering work of Beazley and Moon was followed up by Arthur Dale Trendall.[10] In the 1930s she did work for Trendall's Paestan Pottery (1936), and visited the British School at Rome again in 1937, spending some time with Trendall and seeing museum collections in southern Italy.[11]
Family
Noël Moon married the educational administrator and historian Walter Oakeshott in April 1928 at Aston Tirrold. The engagement from 1926 was prolonged by Walter's need to move from his position at Bec School; an operation for chronic appendicitis he had; and opposition and stalling tactics from her wealthy father, who considered that Walter's social position was inadequate.[12]
Beazley named the so-called Oakeshott painter after the couple.
Notes
- ^ Dancy, John (1995). Walter Oakeshott: A diversity of gifts. Michael Russell. p. 45.
- ^ Mason, Philip. "Moon, Sir (Edward) Penderel". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/39897. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Kelly's (1943). Kelly's Handbook to the Titled, Landed and Official Classes. Kelly's Directories. p. 1298.
- ^ a b Dillon, P. (2018). "A social and literary network in North Berkshire around the time of the First World War". Journal of the Friends of the Dymock Poets. 17: 103–113.
- ^ a b c d e Dancy, John (1995). Walter Oakeshott: A diversity of gifts. Michael Russell. pp. 33–34.
- ^ Brown, Beatrice Curtis (1960). Isabel Fry, 1869-1958: Portrait of a Great Teacher. A. Barker. pp. 101–108.
- ^ a b Dancy, John (1995). Walter Oakeshott: A diversity of gifts. Michael Russell. p. 35.
- ^ Keen, Maurice Hugh, C. J. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/105559.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) - ^ Carpenter, T. H.; Lynch, K. M.; Robinson, E. G. D. (2014). The Italic People of Ancient Apulia. Cambridge University Press. p. 124. ISBN 978-1-107-04186-8.
- ^ AO, Professor Maxwell R. Bennett (2019). The Search for Knowledge and Understanding. Sydney University Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-74210-450-8.
- ^ Dancy, John (1995). Walter Oakeshott: A diversity of gifts. Michael Russell. p. 76.
- ^ Dancy, John (1995). Walter Oakeshott: A diversity of gifts. Michael Russell. pp. 45–46.