John Armstrong | |
Birth Date: | 1909 6, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Dover, England |
Death Place: | Boars Hill, Oxfordshire |
Discipline: | Medieval English History, Medieval Burgundy, the Wars of the Roses, the medieval nobility |
Work Institutions: | Hertford College, Oxford |
Alma Mater: | University of Oxford |
Known For: | Lecturer, historian |
Charles Arthur John Armstrong (born 1909), known as John Armstrong,[1] was a leading post-war English historian, known for his studies of the First Battle of St Albans and the medieval Duchy of Burgundy.
Educated at Harrow School, he became one of a district group of English historians from Oxford University, along with K. B. McFarlane and E.F. Jacob.[2] On leaving Oxford, he worked briefly for the Diplomatic Service[2] and it was whilst working in this capacity in Lille Municipal Library in 1934 that he discovered the until-then lost manuscript of Dominic Mancini's account of the reign of Edward V of England and the accession of his uncle, Richard III in the summer of 1483.[3] He presented a description of this in The Times the same year, and then proceeded to translate and transcribe the manuscript. Since described as 'a model of precise scholarship,'[1] it was published by the Oxford University Press as The Usurpation of Richard III in July 1936.[4]
He joined Hertford College as a Tutor in Modern History the following year, and taught there for the next thirty years, eventually being elected a Fellow of the college.[2] Many of his postgraduate students went on to have notable careers as historians themselves.[5] His career was not without incident: 'intolerant of cant or hypocrisy,' wrote Saul, he would prefer to leave the college's High Table and dine with the undergraduates if he disapproved of the dinner company forced upon him.[1] He published articles widely; the article being the vehicle of choice in the period, he was, in Nigel Saul's words, 'by nature a miniaturist.'[1] His interests ranged from the piety of Cecily Neville, Duchess of York, to the coronation ceremonies of Yorkist kings, to the First Battle of St Albans; his detailed analysis of the latter, according to Michael Hicks, can be considered 'the last word' on the subject.[6]
He was married to another scholar,[1] Elizabeth Tyler, Emerita Fellow of Somerville College, Oxford, who herself wrote upon sixteenth-century France. He died on 9 August 1994 at the age of eighty-five.[2]