Michael Swanton

Professor Michael Swanton inspects medieval murals discovered in Devon, UK.
Professor Michael Swanton inspects medieval murals discovered in Devon, UK, 2008
Professor Michael Swanton as Student chairman.
Student chairman, 1962–63 Handbook frontis.

Michael James Swanton (born 1939) is a British polymath: historian, linguist, literary critic, translator, archaeological metallurgist and architectural historian specialising in Old English literature and the Anglo-Saxon period.

Born a Bow-bells Cockney, Swanton survived blitz-stricken London dockland an epileptic bi-polar depressive. Disadvantaged as a child, he failed 11+ examinations, but was educated successively at South London secondary modern, technical and grammar schools; then student of the University of Durham (elected Chairman of the students' union, and of the Standing Congress of Northern Student Unions) and later of Bath, gaining research degrees in both arts and science and a higher doctorate, D. Litt., Dunelm. He taught English Literature at the University of Manchester, then English Linguistics at the Universities of Giessen in Germany, and of Lausanne in Switzerland, and finally Medieval Studies at Exeter, where he also acted as the university's Public Orator for several years. During the 1960s–70s he was Honorary Editor of The Royal Archaeological Institute, and in 1971 founded the well-considered series of Exeter Medieval Texts & Studies (sixty titles to date). In retirement, he is Emeritus Professor of Medieval Studies at Exeter University. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and of the Society of Antiquaries and is reckoned an authority on Anglo-Saxon England. In 2010 in collaboration with Tom Blaen he established The Medieval Press.[1]

Swanton's wide-ranging personal published work includes translations of Beowulf, the Gesta Herewardi (a life of Hereward the Wake), Vitae duorum Offarum (The Lives of Two Offas), and The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as well as books on early English literature, art, architecture, and archaeology.

Publications

Professor Swanton holds a glass of wine in one hand and a copy of his book 'The Lives of Two Offas' in the other, at the launch of the book.
Professor Swanton at the publication of his book 'The Lives of Two Offas', 2010

Ephemerides

Notes

  1. 1 2 Michael Swanton at medievalpress.com, accessed 15 July 2011
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Swanton, Michael James, at regesta-imperii.de, accessed 15 July 2011
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