Alfred Chilton Pearson (8 October 1861-2 January 1935) was an English classical scholar, noted for his work on Greek tragedy.[1]
After education at King's College School and Highgate School Pearson went up to Christ's College, Cambridge to read classics where he graduated in 1883.[2] After practising briefly as a barrister Pearson spent ten years (1890-1900) as a schoolmaster before entering his late father's business. During this period he produced school editions of some of the plays of Sophocles, culminating in 1917 with his magnum opus, an edition of the Fragments of Sophocles, a work left unfinished on his death by Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb.[1]
At the age of 58, and despite a life spent outside academia, Pearson was elected in 1919 as the Gladstone Professor of Greek at the University of Liverpool, subsequently becoming in 1921 the Regius Professor of Greek at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Trinity College.
In 1924, the year of his election as a Fellow of the British Academy[3], Pearson published his edition of the works of Sophocles in the Oxford Classical Texts series,[1] which remained in print until superseded in 1990 by the edition of Hugh Lloyd-Jones and N.G.Wilson.[4]
Academic offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Carl Friedrich Ferdinand Lehmann-Haupt |
Gladstone Professor of Greek Liverpool University 1919 - 1921 |
Succeeded by A. Y. Campbell |
Preceded by Henry Jackson |
Regius Professor of Greek Cambridge University 1921 - 1928 |
Succeeded by Donald Struan Robertson |