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Sir James Cochran Stevenson Runciman (7 July 1903 - 1 November 2000)
was a British historian known for his work on the Middle Ages. He was born in Northumberland. Both of
his parents were Members of Parliament for the Liberal Party, and his paternal grandfather, Lord Runciman, was a
shipping magnate. A King's Scholar at Eton College, he was an exact
contemporary and close friend of George Orwell. In 1921 he entered Trinity College,
Cambridge as a history scholar. His work on the Byzantine
Empire earned him a fellowship at Trinity in 1927. After receiving a large inheritance
from his grandfather, Runciman resigned his fellowship in 1938 and began traveling widely.
From 1942 to 1945 he was Professor of Byzantine Art
and History at Istanbul University, in Turkey, where he began the research on the Crusades which would
lead to his best known work, the History of the Crusades (whose three volumes appeared respectively in 1951, 1952, and 1954).
Runciman was an old-fashioned scholar, uninterested in applying sociology or
historiography to his accounts of the past. He was also an
old-fashioned English eccentric, known, among other things, as an aesthete, raconteur, enthusiast of the occult, and friend of aristocrats and political leaders in
many countries. He died in Radway, Warwickshire.
Quotes
- 'Unlike Christianity, which preached a peace that it never achieved, Islam unashamedly came with a sword'
- 'I believe that the supreme duty of the historian is to write history, that is to say, to attempt to record in one sweeping
sequence the greater events and movements that have swayed the destiny of man.'
External links
- Obituaries from the London Times and
the Daily Telegraph
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