Sir Frank Merry StentonFBA (17 May 1880 – 15 September 1967) was an English historian of Anglo-Saxon England, a professor of history at the University of Reading (1926–1946), president of the Royal Historical Society (1937–1945),[1] Reading University's vice-chancellor (1946–1950).
With Allen Mawer, Stenton wrote the second English Place-Name Society volume, The Place-Names of Buckinghamshire, published in 1925. He delivered the Ford LecturesatOxford University in 1929. He went on to write Anglo-Saxon England, a volume of the Oxford History of England, first published in 1943 and described by Simon Keynes as "magisterial and massively authoritative".[4] In the view of Nicholas Higham writing in 1992 it "remains the most complete study of Anglo-Saxon history that has ever appeared. He was himself a historian of the first rank, an eminent place-name scholar and in addition well versed in archaeological literature."[5]
Stenton was a professor of history at the University of Reading (1926 – 1946), and subsequently the university's vice-chancellor (1946–1950). During his period as vice-chancellor at Reading, he presided over the university's purchase of Whiteknights Park, creating the new campus that allowed for the expansion of the university in later decades. In November 2008, it was announced that a new hall of residence to be constructed on that campus would be named Stenton Hall, in his honour.[6] The annual Stenton Lecture, given by an eminent historian, was inaugurated at Reading University in 1967.[7]
His wife, Doris Mary Stenton, wrote a preface to the third edition of Anglo-Saxon England, published after his death, and edited Preparatory to Anglo-Saxon England: Being the Collected Papers of Frank Merry Stenton, published in 1970. She was a historian in her own right, producing English Society in the Early Middle Ages for the Pelican History of England, and The English Woman in History (1957).[7]
Stenton's papers, together with those of his wife Doris, Lady Stenton, their library and his coin collection are part of the Special Collections in the University of Reading.
^Drennan, Basil St G., ed. (1970). The Keble College Centenary Register 1870–1970. Keble College, Oxford. p. 3. ISBN978-0-85033-048-9.
^Keynes, Simon (2003). "Introduction". An Introduction to Anglo-Saxon England by Peter Hunter Blair with a New Introduction by Simon Keynes (3rd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. xxi. ISBN978-0-521-83085-0.
^Higham, Nicholas (1992). Rome, Britain and the Anglo-Saxons. London, UK: Seaby. p. 7. ISBN978-1-85264-022-4.