Arthur Charles Lewis BrownArthur Charles Lewis Brown (August 18, 1869 – June 21, 1946)[1] was an American scholar who wrote on the origin of Arthurian Romances.[2] BiographyBrown was born in Avon, New York, son of Rev. Charles Fortune and Sarah C. (Lewis) Brown.[3] His father was a popular Episcopal missionary and priest who authored Christ on the Throne of Power and Antichrist: A Treatise on the Book of Revelation, to St. John the Divine in 1885. Given his Episcopal upbringing, in 1883, Arthur attended and graduated Hobart College,[4] the oldest Episcopal college in America.[5] In 1896, he assumed a teaching post with Haverford College in Pennsylvania,[6] where he began his studies of the legends of King Arthur. He returned to school at Harvard, earning his Ph.D in 1900, and continued his post-doctoral work as a Rogers Traveling Fellow of Harvard at Universities of Paris and Freiburg 1900-1901.[3] His doctoral dissertation attempted to find a connection between the story of King Arthur and Celtic folklore. The thesis, “The Round Table Before Wace” is still often quoted and argued among scholars and historians. As a graduate student at Harvard, Brown had stated that “he detested the elective system” in American education, which Harvard President Eliot had indoctrinated, and throughout his career he would maintain that a true liberal education could only be one that embraced “the 'noble' subjects, Latin and Greek, mathematics, and philosophy.”[1] On June 15, 1907, Arthur married Octavia Crenshaw, from Richmond, Virginia,[7] and they settled in Evanston, Illinois where Brown was Professor of English at Northwestern University from 1906-1939. During this tenure, he produced one to two articles annually, most of which pertained to Arthurian legends and Celtic folklore. Brown's one great interest of his scholarly life was the effort to find the origin of the Arthurian romances,[2] resulting in a voluminous outpouring of articles, books and reviews under variations of his name. On June 28, 1946, as he was turning his bicycle from a connecting into a main road, Brown was struck by a passing car. Although he declared himself unhurt, and wanted to remount and continue, he was carried protesting to a Dubuque hospital and died a few hours later of a fractured skull. He was 76 years old.[1] BibliographyBrown, Arthur Charles Lewis: The Round Table before Wace. pp. 183–205 of Studies and Notes in Philology, Vol. VII. Boston:, 1900. (See The Round Table.) NotesReferencesBiographical Catalogue of the Matriculates of Haverford College: Together with Lists of the Members of the College Faculty and the Managers, Officers and Recipients of Honorary Degrees, 1833-1900Haverford College Alumni Association, Allen Clapp, 1900 Brown, Alan Willard. Hobart College: Oldest Episcopal College in U.S.A. New York:Newcomen Society in North America, 1954 The Harvard Graduates' Magazine. Boston: Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association, 1908 Leonard, John William and Marquis, Albert Nelson. The Book of Chicagoans: A Biographical Dictionary of Leading Living Men of the City of Chicago. Chicago:A.N. Marquis, 1911 Newberry Library Bulletin. Number 5:September, 1946. |