The Drapers Professorship of French is a professorship in the study of the French language at the University of Cambridge. It was founded in 1919 by a donation from the Worshipful Company of Drapers, and was the first chair in French established at Cambridge. Its establishment was part of the growth of the study of modern European languages such as French, German, and Italian in the early 19th century.[1] The Drapers Company initially guaranteed to fund the chair at £800 per year for ten years; the grant was renewed in 1939.[2]
Drapers Professors
edit- Oliver Herbert Phelps Prior (1919)[3]
- Frederick Charles Green (1934)
- Lewis Charles Harmer (1951)[4]
- Lloyd James Austin (1967–1980)[5]
- Peter Rickard (1980–1982)[6]
- Terence Cave (elected but did not take the chair, 1985)[2]
- Peter James Bayley (1985)[7]
- Michael Moriarty (2011)[8]
References
edit- ^ Brooke, Christopher N. L. (1993), A History of the University of Cambridge: 1870-1990, Cambridge University Press, p. 433, ISBN 9780521343503
- ^ a b Professors, Cambridge University, retrieved 2 February 2019
- ^ "80-year-old OPS officially revived" (PDF), Newsletter of the Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages, Cambridge University, p. 2, Summer 2014
- ^ T.G.S.C. (1975), "Lewis Charles Harmer (1902–1975)", French Studies, XXIX (3): 373–374, doi:10.1093/fs/xxix.3.373
- ^ Hunter, Richard; Parsons, Peter (2015), "Colin François Lloyd Austin 1941–2010", Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy, XIV: 3–12
- ^ Sampson, Rodney; Ayres-Bennett, Wendy (2002), Interpreting the History of French: A Festschrift for Peter Rickard on the Occasion of His Eightieth Birthday, Faux titre : études de langue et littérature françaises, vol. 226, Rodopi, p. xii, ISBN 9789042015807
- ^ "Peter Bayley (1944–2018)", French Studies, 72 (4): 649–651, August 2018, doi:10.1093/fs/kny221
- ^ "Elections", Cambridge University Reporter, vol. CXLI, no. 22, 16 March 2011