Rosalind Mitchison

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Rosalind Mary Mitchison

FRSE (11 April 1919 – 19 September 2002) was a 20th-century English historian and academic who specialised in Scottish social history. She was affectionately known as "Rowy" Mitchison.[1]

Life

Rosalind Mary Wrong was born in Manchester. Her father, Edward Murray Wrong, and his father, George MacKinnon Wrong, were both historians. Her brother was Oliver Wrong.

She was educated at

Lady Margaret Hall and went to the University of Manchester as an assistant lecturer, working under Sir Lewis Namier
, in 1943.

In 1953 her husband was appointed to a professorship at the University of Edinburgh and they moved to Scotland. Mitchison taught history, initially part-time, at Edinburgh until 1957. In 1962 she began teaching at the University of Glasgow where she remained until 1967, latterly as a full-time lecturer. Her first work, Agricultural Sir John (1962), broke new ground in the history of 18th-century Scotland, hitherto mainly studied, when studied at all, from the perspective of the Acts of Union 1707 or the Scottish Enlightenment.

She returned to the University of Edinburgh in 1967 as a

Emeritus Professor
of Social History, a post she held until 1986.

In 1994 she was elected a Fellow of the

Michael Francis Oliver, Charles Kemball and D. E. R. Watt.[2]

She died in hospital in Edinburgh on 19 September 2002.[3]

Family

In 1947, while Tutor at

Dick Mitchison
. They had four children, three daughters and one son.

Books and publications

Sources

References