Serena Professor of Italian

The Serena Professorship of Italian is the senior professorship in the study of Italian language, literature and culture at the University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, University of Manchester and University of Birmingham. At Cambridge, it was founded in 1917 by a donation of £10,000 from Arthur Serena (died 1922), a shipbroker and son of the Venetian patriot Leone Serena. He also endowed the Serena Medal awarded annually by the British Academy for furtherance of the study of Italian history, philosophy, music, literature, art and economics. [1]

Serena Professors at Birmingham

  • J. H. Whitfield (1946-1974)
  • Philip McNair (1974-1994)
  • Michael Caesar (1994-2008)

Serena Professors at Cambridge

  • Thomas Okey (1919-1929)
  • Raffaello Piccoli (1929-1933)
  • Edward Bullough (1933-1934)
  • Eric Reginald Pearce Vincent (1935-1962)
  • Uberto Limentani (1962-1981)
  • Patrick Boyde (1982-2002)
  • Zygmunt Barański (2002-2012)
  • Robert Gordon (2012–present)

Serena Professors at Manchester

(The Chair was vacant between 1944 and 1961)

  • Giovanni Aquilecchia (1961–1970)
  • Thomas Gwynfor ('Gwyn') Griffith (1971–1988)
  • David Robey (1989–1998)
  • Maggie Günsberg (2000–2004)
  • Stephen J. Milner (2006–present)

Serena Professors at Oxford

When after Grayson’s retirement the Serena Chair was ‘frozen’, because of government funding cuts, Gianni Agnelli, head of Fiat, generously agreed a contribution of £750,000 to ‘unfreeze’ the Oxford Chair. In recognition of this benefaction, the name of the Chair at Oxford became the Fiat-Serena Chair of Italian Studies.

In the summer of 2009 there was a further modification in nomenclature when the name changed to the Agnelli-Serena Chair of Italian Studies, a change which reflects more directly the role of the two great benefactors at the beginning and end of the twentieth century.

gollark: I doubt it's a *likely* race condition, but I would like to avoid it.
gollark: I'm pretty sure that the solution to this in C would just be to have race conditions and not notice.
gollark: I was trying to look at how other IRCds solve this, but they're all just tens of thousands of lines of incomprehensible C which probably still contain race conditions, or miniircd, which as far as I can tell just ignores the problem.
gollark: This was determined using methods.
gollark: Java is in fact horrors.

References

  1. "Serena Medal".
  2. "Appointments Humanities" (PDF). gazette.web.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
  • Charlton, H. B. (1951) Portrait of a University. Manchester U. P.; p. 173
  • Uberto Limentani, ‘Leone and Arthur Serena and the Cambridge Chair of Italian 1919-1934’, in Martin McLaughlin (ed.), Britain and Italy from Romanticism to Modernism. A Festschrift for Peter Brand (Oxford: Legenda, 2000), pp. 154-77.
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