Arthur Augustus Tilley

Arthur Augustus Tilley (1 December 1851 – 4 December 1942) was an academic of the University of Cambridge. An Old Etonian, his first subject at Cambridge was Classics, after which he began a career as a barrister. He returned to his old college to teach Classics, going on to specialise in French literature and becoming both a literary critic and a historian.

Tilley is remembered at Cambridge for resisting the modernisation of behaviour and dress which he observed, describing the new elements in his college as 'bounders'.

Early life

Tilley was the only child of Sir John Tilley, Secretary to the General Post Office,[1] by his marriage to Mary Ann Partington, who was his second wife.[2][3] Tilley's father had been married firstly, in 1839, to Cecilia Trollope, a favourite sister of the novelist Anthony Trollope, who sometimes stayed with the Tilleys in Cumberland.[4][5] Cecilia Tilley had died in 1849, having had five children, of whom four died soon after her. In 1861 Tilley's father married thirdly Susannah Anderson Montgomerie, with whom he had one daughter and two further sons, Tilley's half brothers: William George Tilley, born in 1863,[6] and John Anthony Cecil Tilley, later a British ambassador, born in 1869.[7]

The young Tilley was educated at Eton, where he was celebrated as "Scholar of the Year" for 1871,[5] winning both the Newcastle scholarship for Classics and the Tomline scholarship for Mathematics. He went on to King's College, Cambridge,[8] where in 1875 he came second in the Classical Tripos.[9] He was then admitted to the Inner Temple, studied for a career in the law, and was called to the Bar.[10]

Career

Tilley was elected a Fellow of his old college, King's, in 1876 and later was also a lecturer there. He did not turn his back on the law until 1882, when Anthony Trollope wrote to his wife Rose "Arthur has given up the bar for good & all: – is to live at Cambridge."[11] In 1883, he became Junior Tutor of King's. Although not a reactionary, he was very keen on good form and correct dress and was critical of the behaviour of the growing number of members of the college who failed to respect them. As Junior Tutor he invited all sorts to dinner, as he felt he should do, but after one such occasion said to Arthur Benson "Thank God my bounders' dinner is over!"[5][12]

In 1884, Tilley was still a tutor and lecturer for the Classical Tripos, and in that year he penned a valedictory:

The old type of scholarship, the name by which we have been accustomed to know 'a minute acquaintance with the niceties of the dead languages', is rapidly passing away from us. No longer is the skilful emendation of a Greek play the royal road to a bishopric; no longer do grave statesmen and men of learning beguile their leisure moments with doing Humpty Dumpty into Latin verse; a classical quotation in the House of Commons is almost an event; a false quantity falls there on unheeding ears.[13]

In 1890, Tilley resigned as Junior Tutor of King's College after being held responsible for inciting the throwing into the college fountain of the "long-haired Kingsman" Robbie Ross.[11] Ross developed pneumonia as a result of the incident and subsequently left Cambridge without graduating.

Apart from a number of important literary studies, Tilley was editor of the academic journals Medieval France and Modern France.[1] In 1903 he published a history of the Reformation in France, as part of the Cambridge Modern History.[14]

His later work included two chapters for the Cambridge Medieval History, one entitled The Early Renaissance (in volume 7, 1932) and the other The Renaissance in Europe (in volume 8, 1936). Denys Hay later commented that "Looking back on this presentation of the Renaissance the most striking feature is its desultory character... an amalgam of assertions of broad principles with antiquarian observation of detail, in which the structure of society and politics was all but ignored... In short, the Renaissance is neither explained nor interpreted".[15][16]

Tilley married Margaret, daughter of J. A. Clutton-Brock, and they had one son and three daughters. He died on 4 December 1942, three days after his 91st birthday, and at the time of his death was living at number 2, Selwyn Gardens, Cambridge.[1]

Major publications

External links

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Arthur Augustus Tilley

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 TILLEY, Arthur Augustus, in Who Was Who (A. & C. Black, 1920–2008); online edition by Oxford University Press, December 2007 (subscription required), accessed 21 December 2010
  2. Birth Certificate: Arthur Augustus Tilley 1851
  3. Victoria Glendinning, Trollope (Hutchinson, London, 1992) p. 187
  4. T. H. S. Escott, Anthony Trollope, His Work, Associates and Literary Originals (Read Books facsimile edition, 2008), p. 28: "Anthony Trollope had the satisfaction of seeing a favourite sister, Cecilia, become the wife of a Civil Service official, afterwards Sir John Tilley, and comfortably settled in Cumberland, whence she lavished invitations on her brother."
  5. 1 2 3 L. P. Wilkinson, A century of King's: 1873–1972 (1980), p. 27
  6. Victoria Glendinning, Trollope (Hutchinson, London, 1992) p. 393
  7. Birth Certificates: William George Tilley, 1863; John Anthony Cecil Tilley, 1869
  8. "Tilley, Arthur Augustus (TLY871AA)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  9. Henry Stephens Salt, Memories of bygone Eton (1928), p. 106: "...my friend Arthur Tilley, who distinguished himself at Eton by winning both the Newcastle (classical) and the Tomline (mathematical) scholarships, and who was second in the Classical Tripos at Cambridge in 1875."
  10. The Annual register of world events: a review of the year: Volume 184 (Longmans, Green, 1943), p. 452: "Dr. Arthur Augustus Tilley, distinguished Renaissance scholar, was born on December 1, 1851, son of Sir JA Tilley, Secretary of the Post Office. After being educated at Eton and King's College, Cambridge, he studied Law and was called to the bar by the Inner Temple in 1876."
  11. 1 2 Letter from Anthony Trollope to Rose Trollope dated 3 October 1882, in N. John Hall & Nina Burgis, eds., The letters of Anthony Trollope vol. 1, at p. 986 (and see footnote)
  12. Michael Cox, M. R. James, an informal portrait (1983), p. 53
  13. A. A. Tilley, 'The Development of Classical Learning' in National Review, vol. 4 (1884), p. 163
  14. A. A. tilley, The Reformation in France, part of Cambridge Modern History vol. II The Reformation: The end of the Middle Ages (1903), full text online at uni-mannheim.de
  15. Denys Hay, Renaissance essays (Continuum International Publishing Group, 1988), p. 136
  16. Kay Schiller, 'Made fit for America', in Stefan Berger, Peter Lambert, eds., Historikerdialoge: Geschichte, Mythos und Gedächtnis im deutsch-britischen kulturellen Austausch 1750–2000 (2003), p. 354
  17. outline at books.google.com
  18. outline and contents at books.google.com
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