John Swinnerton Phillimore

John Swinnerton Phillimore (1873–1926) was a British classical scholar, translator, and poet. Born in Cornwall, Phillimore was, like his father (Admiral Sir Augustus (1822-97)) before him, and four brothers, educated at Westminster School (1886-91), where he was a Queen's Scholar, before going on to read Literae Humaniores (Classics) at Christ Church, Oxford, where he was also President of the Oxford Union. After taking his degree, he remained at Christ Church as a Student (Fellow and Tutor) until 1899, when he was made Professor of Greek at the University of Glasgow; in 1906 he became Professor of Humanity at the same university. Though he was invited to give the Sather Lectures at the University of California, Berkeley, he was unable to do so because of the First World War. Phillimore was a convert to Roman Catholicism.[1]

John Swinnerton Phillimore

Works

  • Propertius (critical edition) (1901)
  • Sophocles (translation) (1902)
  • Things New and Old (1918)
  • The Hundred Best Latin Hymns (1925)
gollark: Your claims to objectivity when many things we deal with are tricky and subjective bother me somewhat.
gollark: They did appear to show *some* amount of reasoning. I'm not sure what evidence you would want.
gollark: Yes, I know, but it would have been bad to do things.
gollark: No, this would also be bad.
gollark: Because for other servers you can just stick them on a nitrological server elsewhere.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.