Evelyn Jamison

Evelyn Mary Jamison (1877 - 1972) was a British medievalist who devoted herself mainly to the study of the history of the Normans in Sicily.

Jamison was born in 1877, the eldest of three children of Arthur Andrew Jamison, a doctor, and his wife Isabella Green (whose mother, Mary Brandreth Green, was a friend of the novelist Elizabeth Gaskell).[1]

Evelyn Jamison attended Francis Holland School, 39 Graham Street (now Graham Terrace) in London between 1890 and 1895, from where she gained a place at Oxford to study modern History. Her recollections of her time at Francis Holland can be read in "Graham Street Memories" (ed. B Dunning 1931), where she recalls December exams being sat under the "flare of unshaded gaslights when the yellow fog of tradition descended on London".

After graduating from the Modern History program of Lady Margaret Hall in 1901, she was made a research fellow at Somerville College in 1903;[2] she was, in fact, the first beneficiary of the Lady Margaret Research Fellowship, established the previous year by Principal Agnes Maitland.[3] Subsequently, she was a librarian and later vice-principal of Lady Margaret Hall. Among her students was the historian Marjorie Chibnall.[4] She authored several works of history, which were notable for including previously unpublished archival material from the Norman Kingdom of Sicily. Her final work, the 'Catalogus Baronum', was completed after her death by Errico Cuozzo.

After Jamison's death, several of her friends dedicated in her memory a new stone effigy of Lady Margaret Beaufort, namesake of Lady Margaret Hall, installed in the college chapel to replace an earlier, and by then deteriorated, plaster one.[5]

Works

References

  1. "Papers of the Jamison Family". The University of Manchester. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  2. "The Oxford Magazine, Vol. 21" pg. 378
  3. Brittain, Vera "The Women at Oxford: A Fragment of History" pg. 98
  4. "Tradition and Change: Essays in Honor of Marjorie Chibnall" pg. 22
  5. "The Brown Book, a Commemorative Edition for the 500th Anniversary of the Death of Lady Margaret Beaufort". The Lady Margaret Hall Association. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
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