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John Morris (historian)

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John Robert Morris (June 8, 1913 – June 1, 1977 in London) was an English historian who specialised in the study of the institutions of the Roman Empire and the history of Sub-Roman Britain. He is best known for his book The Age of Arthur (1973), which attempted to reconstruct the history of Britain and Ireland during the so-called "Dark Ages" (350-650 A.D.) following the Roman withdrawal, based on scattered archaeological and historical records. Much of his other work focused on Britain during this time.

Biography

Morris read modern history at Jesus College, Oxford from 1932 to 1935, and served in the Army during the Second World War. After the war he held a Leon Fellowship at the University of London and a Junior Fellowship at the Warburg Institute. In 1948 he was appointed Lecturer in Ancient History at University College, London. He worked in India in 1968 and 1969 as a lecturer for the Indian University Grants Commission, before returning to UCL to become Senior Lecturer in Ancient History, a post he held until his death.

In 1952 Morris founded the historical journal Past & Present, which he edited until 1960, and remained chairman of the editorial board until 1972. He was one of the writers, along with A. H. M. Jones and J. R. Martindale, of The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, a biographical dictionary of the years 284-641, the first volume of which was published in 1971. He also instigated the publication of a new edition of the Domesday Book, and edited the Arthurian Period Sources series. His last book was Londinium: London in the Roman Empire, published posthumously in 1982.[1]

Morris was a socialist and anti-war campaigner. He stood unsuccessfully for Parliament in 1935 as a Labour Party candidate, and was for a time secretary to the Labour MP George Strauss. He was a founder-member of the Committee of 100, an anti-war group founded by Bertrand Russell in 1960, and was later involved in the Institute for Workers' Control.

In 1975 Morris wrote the script "Domesday Republished" for the Look, Stranger BBC-TV series.[2][3]

The Age of Arthur

The Age of Arthur (1973) was the first attempt by a professional historian to build a picture of Britain during the period 350–650, when the theoretical King Arthur was supposed to have existed, and whom he accepts as real. The book is not, however, exclusively about Arthur, but on the entire history of Celtic Britain during the era. The book also includes detailed chapters on Brittany on the grounds that its Celtic population which came from migrations from "Greater Britain" meant that "Little Britain" (Brittany) was as much heir to Roman Britannia as were England, Wales, Ireland, and Scotland.

Although popular with the public, the book was heavily criticized in professional historical circles, severely damaging Morris' academic reputation in the eyes of many of his peers. David Dumville launched a famously scathing attack on the methodology adopted by Morris,[4] and while one of the most influential reviews of The Age of Arthur described it as "an outwardly impressive piece of scholarship", it went on to argue that this apparent scholarship "crumbles upon inspection into a tangled tissue of fact and fantasy which is both misleading and misguided".[5] Others, such as James Campbell, were more generous, but still considered that the Age of Arthur was so misleading and full of problems that it was really only of use to professional historians who could sort the interesting ideas from the flights of fantasy.[6]

Notes

  1. ^ Morris (John) Papers at University College London; "Dr J. R. Morris: Studies in ancient history (obituary)". The Times. 10 June 1977. p. 18.
  2. ^ www.imdb.com
  3. ^ "Domesday Republished" (BBC 2, 13 January 1975), BBC Genome, Accessed 2016-01-30
  4. ^ D. N. Dumville, "Sub-Roman Britain: History and Legend", History, 62 (1977), pp. 173-92
  5. ^ D. P. Kirby and J. E. C. Williams, "Review of The Age of Arthur", Studia Celtica, 10-11 (1975-6), pp. 454-86
  6. ^ J. Campbell, "The Age of Arthur", Studia Hibernica, 15 (1975), pp. 177-85