Thomas Farrant Higham
Higham aged 35/6, 16 December 1926
Born20 September 1890
Died29 January 1975 (aged 84)
Spouse
Mary Elizabeth Rogers
(m. 1915)
Children2 (son and daughter)
Academic background
EducationClifton College, Bristol
Alma materTrinity College, Oxford
Academic work
DisciplineClassics

Thomas Farrant Higham (20 September 1890, in Kesari, Punjab – 29 January 1975, in Oxford) was an English classical scholar and translator.

Life

Higham was born in Kesari, Punjab, then part of the British Raj, to English parents Thomas and Eliza Higham. The family shortly thereafter returned to England and Thomas was educated at Clifton before going up to Trinity College, Oxford to read classics, gaining a First in Honour Moderations and the 1912 Gaisford Prize for Greek verse composition. (He submitted a translation, into Theocritean hexameters, of the first nine lines of George Meredith's Love in the Valley). He was subsequently elected a Fellow of his college in 1914. In 1915 he married Mary Elizabeth Rogers, who bore him one son and one daughter.[1]

During the First World War, Higham served with the British Forces in Salonika (1916–19). During the Second World War, he was attached to the Foreign Office (1940–45). From 1939 to 1958 he was Public Orator of Oxford University.[1][2] He died in retirement at Oxford on 29 January 1975.

Works

As editor

As author

  • The Hoopoe's Call of Aristophanes (London: Hampden Press, 1945)
  • Orationes Oxonienses selectae; short Latin speeches on distinguished contemporaries (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1960)

References

Citations

  1. 1 2 Fisher 1988, p. 54.
  2. Pelling 2015, pp. 207-47.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.