Ida Gordon Explained

Ida Lilian Gordon (née Pickles)
Birth Date:14 November 1907
Birth Place:Sandal Magna, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Death Date:26 September 2002
Death Place:Rosemarkie, Scotland
Subject:Philology

Ida Lilian Gordon (born Sandal Magna 14 November 1907, died Rosemarkie 26 September 2002)[1] was a British academic, specialising in Medieval English and Old Norse.

Life

Ida took her BA in English at Leeds University from 1925–28, and completed her PhD there in 1930: 'A typographical study of the sagas of the Vestfirðir: Gull-Þórissaga, Gíslasaga, Hávarðarsaga, Fóstbrœðrasaga and of their traditions'.[2] In 1930,[3] she married E. V. Gordon, Leeds's Professor of English Language, with whom she had four children (the eldest of whom, Bridget Mackenzie, went on to lecture in Old Norse at Glasgow University).[4] J. R. R. Tolkien composed the couple a long Old English praise-poem in the Old Norse drottkvætt-metre, entitled Brýdleop, as a wedding present.[5]

Ida Gordon moved with her husband to Manchester on his appointment as Smith Professor of English Language and Germanic Philology at the University of Manchester. On his death in 1938, and with four children under the age of seven to support, she took on some of his teaching duties, working as a Lecturer until 1960, when she was promoted to Senior Lecturer. She retired in 1968. She visited Iceland twice, and in 1970 was a visiting professor at the University of Victoria, British Columbia.[6]

Works and archives

Archives

In 2014, Ida's eldest daughter Bridget Mackenzie sold a collection of letters written variously to Ida and to her husband by J. R. R. Tolkien to the Brotherton Library of the University of Leeds.[7] Mackenzie passed Ida and Eric Gordon's books to St Andrews University Library.[8]

Books

Articles

References

  1. Web site: J.R.R. Tolkien Reader's Guide Addenda and Corrigenda . Hammondandscull.com . 2016-03-09.
  2. Web site: Leeds University Library /All Locations . Lib.leeds.ac.uk . 2010-04-12 . 2016-03-09.
  3. Leeds, Brotherton Library, Tolkien-Gordon Collection, MS 1952/2/16.
  4. Bridget Mackenzie, 'Corrienessan', Ambaile: Highland History & Culture: http://www.ambaile.org.uk/detail/en/1268/1/EN1268-corrienessan.htm.
  5. Leeds, Brotherton Library, Tolkien-Gordon Collection, MS 1952/2/16.
  6. Unless otherwise stated, information in this entry derives from Douglas A. Anderson, ' "An Industrious Little Devil": E. V. Gordon as Friend and Collaborator with Tolkien', in Tolkien the Medievalist, ed. by Jane Chance, Routledge Studies in Medieval Religion and Culture, 3 (New York: Routledge, 2003), pp. 15-25. .
  7. Web site: Tolkien-Gordon Collection - Leeds University Library . Library.leeds.ac.uk . 2016-03-09.
  8. https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/library/specialcollections/collections/rarebooks/named/gordoncollection/ Gordon Collection