R. B. Merriman

Roger Bigelow Merriman (24 May 1876 7 September 1945) was an American historian and a practitioner of scientific historiography developed by German historians. He is known especially for his multivolume history of the Spanish Empire.[1]

Biography

Roger Bigelow Merriman was the only child of the Rev. Daniel Merriman, minister of the Central Congregational Church in Worcester, Massachusetts, and the artist and art collector Helen Bigelow Merriman.[2] His maternal grandfather was Erastus Brigham Bigelow, an inventor of weaving machinery.[2]

Merriman entered Harvard University as an undergraduate in 1892, earning both an A.B. and an M.A. degree. He went on to spend two years (1897–99) studying history at Oxford University, finishing with a B.Litt degree. He obtained his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1902 and that same year published his biography of Cromwell, which he considered "as apprentice work."[1]:93[3] In 1902 Merriman was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society.[4]

Merriman taught at Harvard for many years. He was initially hired in 1902 as an instructor and was later promoted to assistant professor (1908) and full professor (1918). He served for a time as master of Eliot House.[3] In 1925-36, he was a visiting professor at the Sorbonne in France.[3] He received a number of honorary doctorates.[3]

The course he taught on the Spanish Empire gave the impetus for his research and voluminous publication on the topic.[1]:93–94 His four-volume work The Rise of the Spanish Empire (1918-1934) is recognized as a pioneering work in the field of Latin American history. Its main thesis is that "the Spanish Empire, unlike its British rival, was the natural continuation of Spain's medieval history."[1]:95 One assessment of his work is that "Merriman will always be a historian's historian," and his work never found public favor. "In the long run, one feels, the reputation of Roger Merriman is secure in the hands of his fellow historians."[1]:103

Works

  • The Life and Letters of Thomas Cromwell (London, 1902)
  • The Rise of the Spanish Empire (4 vols., 1918–34)
  • Suleiman the Magnificent 1520-1566 (Cambridge, Mass., 1944)

Personal life

Merriman married Dorothea Foote, and they had four children: Roger, Daniel, Dorothea, and Helen.[3]

gollark: I believe the US is currently looking to regulate cryptocurrency more, although I forgot exactly how.
gollark: Also, due to technical quirks, they often aren't as decentralized as often claimed. But nobody seems to care very much about this.
gollark: Yet people don't care about learning and don't do it and do gambling.
gollark: It's not particularly hard, in my opinion, to learn basic things about probability and expected value and such. It's difficult to *internalize* them and use them all the time, but gambling is a situation which is obviously bound by them and in which you can use formal mathematical reasoning easily.
gollark: This isn't really much of an explanation.

References

  1. Garrett Mattingly, "The Historian of the Spanish Empire", in Latin American History: Essays on its Study and Teaching, section III, "Pioneers, 1900-1918", vol. 1, p. 99. reprinted from The American Historical Review, 54::32-48 (Oct. 1948).
  2. "Merriman Family Papers". Massachusetts Historical Society.
  3. C.K.S. "Roger Bigelow Merriman". American Antiquarian Society, October 1945, pp. 245-47. (Obituary)
  4. American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.