Edward Maunde Thompson

Sir Edward Maunde Thompson GCB FBA (4 May 1840 – 14 September 1929) was a British palaeographer and Principal Librarian and first Director of the British Museum.[1] He is also noted for his study of William Shakespeare's handwriting in the manuscript of the play Sir Thomas More.[2]

Sir E. M. Thompson in 1899. Photograph by Alexander Bassano.

Biography

Thompson was born in Jamaica, where his father, Edward Thompson, was Custos of Clarendon, Jamaica.[3] His mother was Eliza Hayhurst Poole, also of Clarendon. He was educated at Rugby and at University College of Oxford University. In 1864, he married Georgiana Susanna McKenzie from an old Scots-Jamaican family. They had one daughter and three sons.

He served as Director and Principal Librarian of the British Museum from 1888 to 1909.[4] He set high standards for the staff of the museum, and worked hard to improve the accessibility of the collections to the public. He secured premises at Hendon to house the museum's newspaper collection.

Thompson's grave in Brookwood Cemetery

He was a founding member of the British Academy in 1901, and served as its second President (1907–09). He was knighted in 1895. He received honorary degrees from Oxford, Durham, St. Andrews and Manchester Universities, and was an honorary fellow of University College, Oxford.

The photographic facsimile of Codex Alexandrinus was issued under his supervision in 1879 and 1880.

In 1916, he published his palaeographic study of the three-page addition to the manuscript of Sir Thomas More, arguing that the three pages in "Hand D" were in Shakespeare's autograph. In 1923, he contributed to the definitive study Shakespeare's Hand in the Play of Sir Thomas More, with Alfred W. Pollard, W. W. Greg, John Dover Wilson, and R. W. Chambers.

He is buried in Brookwood Cemetery.

Bibliography

gollark: I see the memetics worked as designed then.
gollark: How is it "not transparency"? Are you just trying to limit information about staff things spreading? That is basically the opposite of transparency.
gollark: I didn't mean me personally either.
gollark: I *also* think your assumptions of malice are wrong, but thing.
gollark: Mostly if it's easier than working out how something works from scratch.

References

  1. Sir E. Maunde Thompson, The British Museum Quarterly, Volume 4, Number 3, pages 94–96, December 1929. Published by The British Museum.
  2. "Obituary: Sir Edward Maunde Thompson". The Times. The Times Digital Archive. 16 September 1929. p. 14.
  3. Jamaican Historical Society Bulletin, Volume 11, Number 1, April 1998.
  4. Kenyon, Sir Frederic G., Sir Edward Maunde Thompson, 1840–1929. London: H. Milford, 1929.
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