Hilda Murray (philologist)
Hilda Mary Emily Ada Ruthven Murray (1875 – 1951) was an English philologist and literary scholar.
Early life and education
She was born 17 November 1875 in Mill Hill, London, daughter of the lexicographer Sir James Murray and his wife Ada, née Ruthven.[1] She and her five siblings grew up writing out cards for her father’s Oxford English Dictionary in return for pocket money.[2][3] She was educated at Oxford High School and achieved a First Class in English Language and Literature from Oxford University in 1899, also taking a Cambridge degree in 1926.[2]
Academic career
From 1899–1915 she was Lecturer in
Publications
During her Oxford degree, Hilda continued her work on the Oxford English Dictionary, researching etymologies and providing statistical analysis for the introductory material.[4][5]
In 1911, she published an edition and analysis of the Middle English poem Erthe upon Erthe with the Early English Text Society, collecting 25 versions of the poem from the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries.[6][7]
She published an edition of Robert Henryson’s fifteenth-century Selected Fables in 1930.
A kind but exacting tutor, she was reputed to have ‘one of the best memories in Europe’ and to be able to finish the Times crossword in five minutes.[8][2]
She died in Chichester, Sussex, on 23 August 1951.[1]
References
- ^ doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/48501. (Subscription or UK public library membershiprequired.)
- ^ ISBN 978-0-8108-2567-3.
- ^ "Murray, J. A. H." Examining the OED. Retrieved 2023-12-28.
- JSTOR j.ctt1ww3vgj.
- ISBN 978-0-19-928362-0.[page needed]
- ^ "The Middle English Poem, Erthe Upon Erthe". Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 2023-12-28.
- ProQuest 2173642683.
- ^ M. Bradbrook, essay, My Cambridge, ed. R. Hayman (1977), 40–52