Fred Norris Robinson

Fred Norris Robinson in 1904

Fred Norris Robinson (April 4, 1871 – July 21, 1966), professionally known as F.N. Robinson, was an eminent American Celticist and scholar of Geoffrey Chaucer.

Biography

Robinson received his B.A. (1891), M.A. (1892), and PhD (1894) from Harvard University, working with the eminent medievalists Francis James Child and George Lyman Kittredge. In 1936, after appointments at Harvard as instructor (1894), assistant professor (1902), and professor (1906), he succeeded his thesis adviser, Kittredge, as Gurney Professor of English. In 1895, he spent a year abroad at the University of Freiburg, Germany, working with Rudolph Turneysen, one of the founders of Celtic Philology.

Scholarly achievements

Robinson's main scholarly achievement was the publication, after 29 years of preparatory work, of the most influential edition of The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer (1933; second edition, 1957, published under slightly different titles). The 1987 Riverside Chaucer, while revised and re-edited by several colleagues, is greatly indebted to his work. These three editions have facilitated more students' first contact with the medieval author than any other editions of Chaucer. Moreover, Robinson's work as editor contributed to the move of Chaucer studies from Europe to North America.

Robinson essentially established Celtic Studies in the United States. He taught America's first course in Gaelic and amassed a voluminous collection of books related to Irish, Welsh, Scottish Gaelic, Cornish, Breton and Manx language and literature, which he bequeathed to Harvard University's Widener Library. As a result, the university has the world's most comprehensive collection of works in the Celtic Studies field.[1]

Select publications

Literature

References

  1. Anita Obermeier, "Robinson, Fred Norris," Handbook of Medieval Studies, ed. Albrecht Classen (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2010), pp. 2594-99 (here 2594).
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