Eric John

1922 - 2000
languages spoken, written or signed:  English
occupation:  historian

Eric John (1922–2000) was a reader in history at the University of Manchester and a specialist in Anglo-Saxon history. He was described by James Campbell as "one of the most distinguished and provocative of Anglo-Saxonists". D. H. Farmer described his studies of the English Benedictine Reform, mainly in pages 154-264 of Orbis Britanniae, as "both stimulating and provocative; even those who cannot assent to all his conclusions recognise that he has brought a new dimension to the study of the reform". His books included: The king and the monks in the tenth-century Reformation. Manchester, UK: John Rylands Library. 1959. OCLC 35146827. Land tenure in early England; a discussion of some problems. Leicester, UK: Leicester University Press. 1960. OCLC 2311824. Orbis Britanniae. Leicester, UK: Leicester University Press. 1966. OCLC 398831. Reassessing Anglo-Saxon England. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press. 1996. ISBN 0-7190-5053-7. He also contributed chapters on the later Anglo-Saxon period in The Anglo-Saxons (1982), edited by James Campbell; and "The Social and Political Problems of the Early English Church" in Anglo-Saxon History: Basic Readings (2000) edited by David Pelteret. Edward the Elder 899-924 (2001) was dedicated as a memorial to the life and work of Eric John. Source: Wikipedia (en)

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