Jeremy Catto
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Dr Robert Jeremy Adam Inch Catto was, until 2006, the Rhodes Fellow and Tutor in Modern History, Oriel College, Oxford, where he was also Senior Dean. He holds a Master's degree (M.A.) and a doctorate (D.Phil.) His research interests lie in the politics and religion of later medieval England. In a piece in The Spectator to commemorate his retirement in June 2006, Alan Duncan MP described him as "the quintessential Oxford don... if one were to devour C.P. Snow, Goodbye Mr Chips and Porterhouse Blue, there is a smattering of Catto in each."[1]
[edit] Publications
- (ed. with T.A.R. Evans), The History of the University of Oxford Volume I: The Early Oxford Schools (June 28, 1984) Clarendon Press ISBN 0-19-951011-3
- (ed. with T.A.R. Evans), The History of the University of Oxford Volume II: Late Mediaeval Oxford (December 17, 1992) Clarendon Press ISBN 0-19-951012-1
- 'The King's Government and the Fall of Pecock 1457-58' in Rulers and Ruled in Late Mediaeval England (ed. R.E. Archer and Simon Walker), (Hambledon, 1995) pp. 201-222
- (ed. with L. Mooney), The Chronicle of John Somer, OFM (Camden Miscellany 34, 1997) . (1997)
- 'Currents of religious thought and expression' in Cambridge Medieval History (ed. MCE Jones), Vol 6 (Cambridge, 2000) pp. 42-65
[edit] References
- ^ Duncan, Alan (10th June, 2006). The don who embodies Oxford The Spectator (volume 301 no. 9279) p. 16.
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