For the Welsh maritime historian and historian of rural crafts, see J. Geraint Jenkins.
Welsh historian (1946–2025)
Geraint Huw Jenkins, FBA, FLSW (24 January 1946 – January 2025) was a Welsh historian and academic who specialised in the history of Wales. He was Professor of Welsh History at the Aberystwyth University (then University College of Wales, Aberystwyth) from 1990 to 1993, when he became Director of the University of WalesCentre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies. In 2009, he retired from academia and was appointed Professor Emeritus of Welsh History at the University of Wales.
Life and career
Born on 24 January 1946, Jenkins attended grammar school in Aberystwyth and then completed his undergraduate studies at the University College of Wales, Swansea, in 1967. He proceeded to carry out his doctoral studies at Swansea University, also then within the University of Wales, under the direction of Glanmor Williams[1]; his PhD was awarded in 1974. Jenkins lectured at Aberystwyth from 1968; he was promoted to senior lecturer in 1981 and reader in 1988, before being appointed Professor of Welsh History in 1990. In 1993, he was appointed Director of the University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies, serving until 2008; in 2009, he was appointed Emeritus Professor at the University of Wales. He served on the Board of Celtic Studies at the University of Wales from 1985, and chaired the board from 1993 to 2007.[2][3]
Jenkins was particularly noted for his contribution to the study of Iolo Morganwg and his work in collating and editing the papers of the latter to enable the publication of A Rattleskull Genius: The Many Faces of Iolo Morganwg (Iolo Morganwg and the Romantic Tradition in Wales (2006).[4] The book has been described as "a scholarly feast", but a reviewer also warned that "...it must run some risk of satiating the appetite it is designed to whet."[5]
Jenkins died in January 2025, at the age of 78.[6]
^Gwyneth Tyson Roberts (May 2002). "The Welsh Language and Its Social Domains 1801-1911 by Geraint H. Jenkins, Geraint B. Jenkins". Social History. 27 (2). Taylor & Francis: 248–250.