Professor Colin James Bundy (born 4 October 1944) is a South African historian and former Principal[1] of Green Templeton College, Oxford.
Professor Bundy was an influential member of a generation of historians who substantially revised understanding of South African history. In particular, he wrote on South Africa's rural past from a predominantly Marxist perspective, but also deploying Africanist and underdevelopment theories. [1] Since the mid-1990s, however, Bundy has held a series of posts in university administration.
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He received his secondary education at Graeme College, Grahamstown in the Eastern Cape Province.
Bundy was educated at the University of Natal (B.A.) and the University of the Witwatersrand (B.A. (Hons)). He was then a Rhodes Scholar at Merton College, Oxford (1968-70) and a Beit Senior Research Scholar at St Antony's (1970-72), graduating as an M.Phil. and D.Phil of the University of Oxford with a thesis entitled African peasants and economic change in South Africa, 1870-1913, with particular reference to the Cape (1976).
Bundy was Director and Principal of the School of Oriental and African Studies (2001-06); Deputy Vice Chancellor of the University of London (2003-06); Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of the Witwatersrand (1997-2001); and Director of the Institute for Historical Research (1992-94) and Vice Rector (1994-97), University of the Western Cape.
He returned to Oxford as a Research Fellow at Queen Elizabeth House (1979-80) and in the Department for External Studies (1980-84), subsequently being elected an Honorary Fellow of Kellogg College. From 2006 until 2008 he was Warden of Green College, Oxford, becoming the first Principal of Green Templeton College on 1 October 2008, when Green College merged with Templeton College. He retired from this position on 1 October 2010.[2]
His publications include
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Preceded by Robert Charlton |
Vice-Chancellor of the University of the Witwatersrand 1997 — 2001 |
Succeeded by Norma Ried-Birley |
Preceded by Position created |
Principal of Green Templeton College, Oxford 2008 — 2010 |
Succeeded by Sir David Watson |
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[[Category:South African Rhodes scholars[[