Taylorian Lecture
Encyclopedia
The Taylorian Lecture, sometimes referred to as the "Special Taylorian Lecture" or "Taylorian Special Lecture", is a prestigious annual lecture on Modern European Literature, delivered at the Taylor Institution
Taylor Institution
The Taylor Institution comprises the buildings in Oxford which harbour the libraries dedicated to the study of the European Languages at Oxford University. It also includes lecture rooms used by the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, University of Oxford...

 in the University of Oxford
University of Oxford
The University of Oxford is a university located in Oxford, United Kingdom. It is the second-oldest surviving university in the world and the oldest in the English-speaking world. Although its exact date of foundation is unclear, there is evidence of teaching as far back as 1096...

 since 1889.

1889-1899

The first eleven lectures were published collectively in 1900, under the title Studies in European Literature, being the Taylorian Lectures 1889—1899:
  • 1889: Edward Dowden
    Edward Dowden
    Edward Dowden , was an Irish critic and poet.He was the son of John Wheeler Dowden, a merchant and landowner, and was born at Cork, three years after his brother John, who became Bishop of Edinburgh in 1886. Edward's literary tastes emerged early, in a series of essays written at the age of twelve...

    , “Literary Criticism in France”
  • 1890: Walter Pater
    Walter Pater
    Walter Horatio Pater was an English essayist, critic of art and literature, and writer of fiction.-Early life:...

    , “Prosper Mérimée
    Prosper Mérimée
    Prosper Mérimée was a French dramatist, historian, archaeologist, and short story writer. He is perhaps best known for his novella Carmen, which became the basis of Bizet's opera Carmen.-Life:...

  • 1891: W. M. Rossetti
    William Michael Rossetti
    William Michael Rossetti was an English writer and critic.-Biography:Born in London, he was a son of immigrant Italian scholar Gabriele Rossetti, and the brother of Maria Francesca Rossetti, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Christina Georgina Rossetti.He was one of the seven founder members of the...

    , “Leopardi
    Giacomo Leopardi
    Giacomo Taldegardo Francesco di Sales Saverio Pietro Leopardi was an Italian poet, essayist, philosopher, and philologist...

  • 1892: T. W. Rolleston
    T. W. Rolleston
    Thomas William Hazen Rolleston was an Irish writer, literary figure and translator, known as a poet but publishing over a wide range of literary and political topics...

    , “Lessing
    Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
    Gotthold Ephraim Lessing was a German writer, philosopher, dramatist, publicist, and art critic, and one of the most outstanding representatives of the Enlightenment era. His plays and theoretical writings substantially influenced the development of German literature...

     and Modern German Literature”
  • 1893 (delivered 1894): Stéphane Mallarmé
    Stéphane Mallarmé
    Stéphane Mallarmé , whose real name was Étienne Mallarmé, was a French poet and critic. He was a major French symbolist poet, and his work anticipated and inspired several revolutionary artistic schools of the early 20th century, such as Dadaism, Surrealism, and Futurism.-Biography:Stéphane...

    , “La musique et les lettres” (Music and Literature)
  • 1894: Alfred Morel-Fatio
    Alfred Morel-Fatio
    Alfred Paul Victor Morel-Fatio was the leading French Hispanist of his time, educated at École des chartes, Paris....

    , “L'Espagne du Don Quijote
  • 1895: H. R. F. Brown
    Horatio Brown
    Horatio Robert Forbes Brown was a Scottish historian who specialized in the history of Venice and Italy.Born in Nice, he grew up in Midlothian, Scotland, was educated in England at Clifton and Oxford, and spent most of his life in Venice, publishing several books about the city...

    , “Paolo Sarpi
    Paolo Sarpi
    Fra Paolo Sarpi was a Venetian patriot, scholar, scientist and church reformer. His most important roles were as a canon lawyer and historian active on behalf of the Venetian Republic.- Early years :...

  • 1896 (delivered 1897): Paul Bourget
    Paul Bourget
    Paul Charles Joseph Bourget , was a French novelist and critic.-Biography:He was born in Amiens in the Somme département of Picardie, France. His father, a professor of mathematics, was later appointed to a post in the college at Clermont-Ferrand, where Bourget received his early education...

    , “Gustave Flaubert
    Gustave Flaubert
    Gustave Flaubert was a French writer who is counted among the greatest Western novelists. He is known especially for his first published novel, Madame Bovary , and for his scrupulous devotion to his art and style.-Early life and education:Flaubert was born on December 12, 1821, in Rouen,...

  • 1897: C. H. Herford
    C. H. Herford
    Charles Harold Herford was an English literary scholar and critic. He is remembered principally for his biography and edition of the works of Ben Jonson in 11 volumes. This major scholarly project was published from 1925 onwards by Oxford University Press, and completed with Percy and Evelyn Simpson...

    , “Goethe’s Italian Journey”
  • 1898: Henry Butler Clarke
    Henry Butler Clarke
    Henry Butler Clarke was a lecturer on Spanish at the University of Oxford's Taylor Institution from 1890 to 1894, and an author of books about Spanish literature and history...

    , “The Spanish Rogue-Story
    Picaresque novel
    The picaresque novel is a popular sub-genre of prose fiction which is usually satirical and depicts, in realistic and often humorous detail, the adventures of a roguish hero of low social class who lives by his wits in a corrupt society...

  • 1899 (delivered 1900): W. P. Ker, “Boccaccio”

1900-1920

Further lectures were delivered in the first few years of the 20th century, but were not published collectively:
  • 1902: James Fitzmaurice-Kelly
    James Fitzmaurice-Kelly
    James Fitzmaurice-Kelly FBA was an English writer on Spanish literature.He was born in Glasgow to Colonel Thomas Kelly of the 40th Regiment of Foot and educated at St Charles's College, Kensington, where he learned Spanish from a fellow pupil and taught himself to read Don Quixote...

    , “Lope De Vega
    Lope de Vega
    Félix Arturo Lope de Vega y Carpio was a Spanish playwright and poet. He was one of the key figures in the Spanish Golden Century Baroque literature...

     and Spanish Drama”
  • 1903: Henry Calthrop Hollway-Calthrop, “Francesco Petrarcha
    Petrarch
    Francesco Petrarca , known in English as Petrarch, was an Italian scholar, poet and one of the earliest humanists. Petrarch is often called the "Father of Humanism"...

  • 1904: George Saintsbury
    George Saintsbury
    George Edward Bateman Saintsbury , was an English writer, literary historian, scholar and critic.-Biography:...

    , “Théophile Gautier
    Théophile Gautier
    Pierre Jules Théophile Gautier was a French poet, dramatist, novelist, journalist, art critic and literary critic....

    : a French Man of Letters of All Work”

1920-1930

In 1917 a new endowment for an annual lecture on "subjects connected to Modern European Literature" was established by a donation of War Stock by Professors Charles Firth
Charles Harding Firth
Sir Charles Harding Firth was a British historian.Born in Sheffield, he was educated at Clifton College and at Balliol College, Oxford...

 and Joseph Wright
Joseph Wright (linguist)
Joseph Wright FBA was an English philologist who rose from humble origins to become Professor of Comparative Philology at Oxford University.-Early life:...

. This second series of lectures began in 1920. In 1930 a further volume of lectures was published, from the years 1920-1930, under the title Studies in European Literature, being the Taylorian Lectures Second Series, 1920—1930:
  • 1920: Edmund Gosse
    Edmund Gosse
    Sir Edmund William Gosse CB was an English poet, author and critic; the son of Philip Henry Gosse and Emily Bowes.-Early life:...

    , “Malherbe
    François de Malherbe
    François de Malherbe was a French poet, critic, and translator.-Life:Born in Le-Locheur , his family was of some position, though it seems not to have been able to establish to the satisfaction of heralds the claims which it made to nobility older than the 16th century.He was the eldest son of...

     and the Classical Reaction in the Seventeenth Century”
  • 1921: Francis Yvon Eccles, “Racine
    Jean Racine
    Jean Racine , baptismal name Jean-Baptiste Racine , was a French dramatist, one of the "Big Three" of 17th-century France , and one of the most important literary figures in the Western tradition...

     in England”
  • 1922: Sir Henry Thomas, “Shakespeare and Spain”
  • 1923: Edmund Garratt Gardner
    Edmund Garratt Gardner
    Edmund Garratt Gardner FBA was an English scholar and writer, specializing in Italian history and literature. At the beginning of the twentieth century, he was regarded as one of the foremost British Dante scholars.-Career:...

    , “Tommaso Campanella
    Tommaso Campanella
    Tommaso Campanella OP , baptized Giovanni Domenico Campanella, was an Italian philosopher, theologian, astrologer, and poet.-Biography:...

     and His Poetry”
  • 1924: John George Robertson, “The Gods of Greece in German Poetry”
  • 1925: Émile Legouis, “G. G. de Beaurieu et son Élève de la nature, 1763”
  • 1926: John Cann Bailey, “Carducci
    Giosuè Carducci
    Giosuè Alessandro Michele Carducci was an Italian poet and teacher. He was very influential and was regarded as the official national poet of modern Italy. In 1906 he became the first Italian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.-Biography:...

  • 1927: Herbert Fisher
    Herbert Fisher
    Herbert Albert Laurens Fisher OM, FRS, PC was an English historian, educator, and Liberal politician. He served as President of the Board of Education in David Lloyd George's 1916 to 1922 coalition government....

    , “Paul Valéry
    Paul Valéry
    Ambroise-Paul-Toussaint-Jules Valéry was a French poet, essayist, and philosopher. His interests were sufficiently broad that he can be classified as a polymath...

  • 1928: Abraham Flexner
    Abraham Flexner
    Abraham Flexner was an American educator. His Flexner Report, published in 1910, reformed medical education in the United States...

    , “The Burden of Humanism
    Humanities
    The humanities are academic disciplines that study the human condition, using methods that are primarily analytical, critical, or speculative, as distinguished from the mainly empirical approaches of the natural sciences....

  • 1929: Oliver Elton
    Oliver Elton
    Oliver Elton was an English literary scholar whose works include A Survey of English Literature in six volumes, criticism, biography, and translations from several languages including Icelandic and Russian...

    , “Chekhov
    Chekhov
    - People :* Alexander Chekhov, older brother of Anton Chekhov* Anton Chekhov , Russian writer** Chekhov Gymnasium, school, and now museum in Taganrog** Chekhov Library, public library in Taganrog** Anton Chekhov class motorship...

  • 1930: Percy Ewing Matheson
    Percy Ewing Matheson
    -Selected works:* A skeleton outline of Roman history * The Theory of the State by Johann Caspar Bluntschli * National ideals...

    , “German Visitors to England, 1770-1795, and their impressions”

Since 1930

Since 1930 no collected volume has been issued, but individual lectures include:
  • 1931: Hilaire Belloc
    Hilaire Belloc
    Joseph Hilaire Pierre René Belloc was an Anglo-French writer and historian who became a naturalised British subject in 1902. He was one of the most prolific writers in England during the early twentieth century. He was known as a writer, orator, poet, satirist, man of letters and political activist...

    , “On Translation”
  • 1932 (delivered 1933): George S. Gordon
    George Stuart Gordon
    George Stuart Gordon was a British literary scholar.Gordon was educated at Glasgow University, Oriel College, Oxford ....

    , “St. Evremond
    Charles de Saint-Évremond
    Charles de Marguetel de Saint-Denis, seigneur de Saint-Évremond was a French soldier, hedonist, essayist and literary critic. After 1661, he lived in exile, mainly in England, as a consequence of his attack on French policy at the time of the peace of the Pyrenees . He is buried in Poets' Corner,...

  • 1933: Geoffrey Langdale Bickersteth, “Form, Tone, and Rhythm in Italian Poetry”
  • 1934: Mario Roques, “La poésie Roumaine contemporaine”
  • 1935: H. W. Garrod
    H. W. Garrod
    Heathcote William Garrod was a British classical scholar and literary scholar. He was Fellow of Merton College, Oxford for over 60 years...

    , “Tolstoi's
    Leo Tolstoy
    Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy was a Russian writer who primarily wrote novels and short stories. Later in life, he also wrote plays and essays. His two most famous works, the novels War and Peace and Anna Karenina, are acknowledged as two of the greatest novels of all time and a pinnacle of realist...

     Theory of Art”
  • 1936: Herbert John Clifford Grierson
    Herbert John Clifford Grierson
    Sir Herbert John Clifford Grierson was a Scottish literary scholar editor and literary critic.-Life and work:...

    , “Two Dutch Poets”
  • 1937: Sir William Alexander Craigie, “The Art of Poetry in Iceland”
  • 1938: Ernest Hoepffner, “Aux origines de la nouvelle
    Cent Nouvelles nouvelles
    The Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles is a collection of stories supposed to be narrated by various persons at the court of Philippe le Bon, and collected together by Antoine de la Sale in the mid-15th century....

     française”
  • 1939: Edgar Allison Peers
    Edgar Allison Peers
    Edgar Allison Peers , also known by his pseudonym Bruce Truscot, was an English Hispanist and educationist. He was Professor in Hispanic Studies at the University of Liverpool and is notable for founding the Modern Humanities Research Association and the Bulletin of Hispanic Studies .As "Bruce...

    , “Antonio Machado
    Antonio Machado
    Antonio Cipriano José María y Francisco de Santa Ana Machado y Ruiz, known as Antonio Machado was a Spanish poet and one of the leading figures of the Spanish literary movement known as the Generation of '98....

  • 1942: Alf Sommerfelt
    Alf Sommerfelt
    Alf Sommerfelt , was a Norwegian linguist and the first professor of linguistics in Norway, working at the University of Oslo from 1931 to 1962.-Linguistics work:...

    , “The Written and Spoken Word in Norway”
  • 1943: Stanisław Stroński, “La poésie et la réalité aux temps des troubadour
    Troubadour
    A troubadour was a composer and performer of Old Occitan lyric poetry during the High Middle Ages . Since the word "troubadour" is etymologically masculine, a female troubadour is usually called a trobairitz....

    s” (Poetry and reality at the time of the troubadours)
  • 1944: Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy
    Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy
    Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy was a Dutch politician of the Anti Revolutionary Party . He served as Prime Minister of the Netherlands from September 3, 1940 until June 24, 1945. He was the Prime Minister of the Dutch government in exile during World War II...

    , “National and International stability: Althusius, Grotius, van Vollenhoven
    Cornelis van Vollenhoven
    Cornelis van Vollenhoven was a Dutch law professor and legal scholar, best known for his work on the legal systems of the East Indies....

  • 1945: Richard McGillivray Dawkins, “The Nature of the Cypriot Chronicle of Leontios Makhairas
    Leontios Makhairas
    Leontios Machairas or Makhairas was a medieval Cypriot historian.The main source of information on him is his chronicle, written in the medieval Cypriot dialect. The chronicle documents events from the visit of Saint Helena to Cyprus until the times of the Kingdom of Cyprus...

  • 1946: H. J. Chaytor, “The Provençal Chanson de Geste
    Chanson de geste
    The chansons de geste, Old French for "songs of heroic deeds", are the epic poems that appear at the dawn of French literature. The earliest known examples date from the late eleventh and early twelfth centuries, nearly a hundred years before the emergence of the lyric poetry of the trouvères and...

  • 1947: Leonard Ashley Willoughby, “Unity and Continuity in Goethe”
  • 1948: John Orr, “The Impact of French upon English”
  • 1949: Thomas Mann
    Thomas Mann
    Thomas Mann was a German novelist, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist, and 1929 Nobel Prize laureate, known for his series of highly symbolic and ironic epic novels and novellas, noted for their insight into the psychology of the artist and the intellectual...

    , “Goethe und die Demokratie”
  • 1951: Jean Sarrailh, “La crise religieuse en Espagne à la fin du XVIIIe siècle”
  • 1952: Bruno Migliorini
    Bruno Migliorini
    Bruno Migliorini was an Italian linguist and philologist. He was the author of one of the first scientific histories of Italian language and was president of the Accademia della Crusca.-Biography:...

    , “The Contribution of the Individual to Language”
  • 1953: Charles Bruneau, “La prose
    Prose
    Prose is the most typical form of written language, applying ordinary grammatical structure and natural flow of speech rather than rhythmic structure...

     littéraire de Proust à Camus
    Albert Camus
    Albert Camus was a French author, journalist, and key philosopher of the 20th century. In 1949, Camus founded the Group for International Liaisons within the Revolutionary Union Movement, which was opposed to some tendencies of the Surrealist movement of André Breton.Camus was awarded the 1957...

  • 1954: Francis Bull
    Francis Bull
    Francis Bull was a Norwegian literary historian, professor at the University of Oslo for more than thirty years, essayist and speaker, and magazine editor.-Early and personal life:...

    , “Ibsen: The Man and the Dramatist”
  • 1955: Sir Harold Idris Bell
    Idris Bell
    Sir Harold Idris Bell CB OBE was a British papyrologist and scholar of Welsh literature....

    , “The Nature of Poetry as Conceived by the Welsh Bard
    Bard
    In medieval Gaelic and British culture a bard was a professional poet, employed by a patron, such as a monarch or nobleman, to commemorate the patron's ancestors and to praise the patron's own activities.Originally a specific class of poet, contrasting with another class known as fili in Ireland...

    s”
  • 1957: Frederick Charles Roe, “Sir Thomas Urquhart
    Thomas Urquhart
    Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromarty was a Scottish writer and translator, most famous for his translation of Rabelais.-Life:...

     and Rabelais”
  • 1959: Elizabeth Mary Wilkinson, “Schiller, Poet or Philosopher?”
  • 1961: Cecil Maurice Bowra, “Poetry and the First World War”
  • 1966: Edward M. Wilson, “Some Aspects of Spanish Literary History” (published 1967)
  • 1967: Charles Ralph Boxer, “Some Literary Sources for the History of Brazil in the Eighteenth Century”
  • 1968: Walter Höllerer, “Elite und Utopie: Zum 100. Geburtstag Stefan George
    Stefan George
    Stefan Anton George was a German poet, editor, and translator.-Biography:George was born in Bingen in Germany in 1868. He spent time in Paris, where he was among the writers and artists who attended the Tuesday soireés held by the poet Stéphane Mallarmé. He began to publish poetry in the 1890s,...

    s” (published 1969)
  • 1971: Carlo Dionisotti, “Europe in Sixteenth-Century Italian Literature”
  • 1975: Harry Levin
    Harry Levin
    Harry Tuchman Levin was an American literary critic and scholar of modernism and comparative literature.-Biography:...

    , “Ezra Pound
    Ezra Pound
    Ezra Weston Loomis Pound was an American expatriate poet and critic and a major figure in the early modernist movement in poetry...

    , T. S. Eliot
    T. S. Eliot
    Thomas Stearns "T. S." Eliot OM was a playwright, literary critic, and arguably the most important English-language poet of the 20th century. Although he was born an American he moved to the United Kingdom in 1914 and was naturalised as a British subject in 1927 at age 39.The poem that made his...

     and the European Horizon”
  • 1978: R. A. Leigh
    Ralph Leigh
    Ralph Alexander Leigh CBE FBA was a modern languages scholar, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and Professor of French in the University of Cambridge from 1973 to 1982, later Sandars Reader in Bibliography, in 1986–87...

    , “Rousseau and the Problem of Tolerance in the Eighteenth Century”
  • 1983: P. E. Russell, “Prince Henry the Navigator: The Rise and Fall of a Culture Hero” (published 1984)
  • 1987: Paul Preston
    Paul Preston
    Paul Preston CBE is a British historian and Hispanist, specialized in Spanish history, in particular the Spanish Civil War, which he has studied for more than 30 years....

    , “Salvador de Madariaga
    Salvador de Madariaga
    Salvador de Madariaga y Rojo was a Spanish diplomat, writer, historian and pacifist. He had two daughters....

     and the Quest for Liberty in Spain”
  • 1992: Barry Ife, “The New World and the Literary Imagination”
  • 2008: Jeffrey Hamburger, “Representations of Reading – Reading Representations: The Female Reader from the Hedwig Codex to Châtillon’s Léopoldine au Livre d’Heures”
  • 2009: Maria de Fátima Silva, “Returning to the Classics in Contemporary Portuguese Drama (with special reference to Hélia Correia
    Hélia Correia
    Hélia Correia is a Portuguese writer, born in Lisbon. At university, she read Romance Philology. After a period working as a high school teacher, Hélia Correia undertook postgraduate studies in Classical Theatre. Her literary career started in earnest in the 1980s and she quickly achieved great...

    ’s dramatic works)”
  • 2010: Lina Bolzoni, “Of Poetry, Poets and the Magic of Mirrors in the Renaissance”
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