Marie Victoria Williams Explained

Marie Victoria Williams
Birth Date:7 September 1882
Birth Place:New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Death Place:Johannesburg, South Africa
Education:St Mary's School, Waverley
Alma Mater:Huguenot College (B.A. Honours)
Newnham College, Cambridge (Classical Tripos)
Occupation:Classicist
Employer:Huguenot College
University of Witwatersrand

Marie Victoria Williams (7 September 1882 – 13 May 1955) was a South African classicist.

Academic career

Williams was born in New Westminster in Canada in 1882, emigrating to the South African Republic with her parents at the age of 11. She matriculated at St Mary's School, Waverley in Johannesburg – gaining first place in the entire country. From St Mary's she proceeded, to Huguenot College in Wellington, where she completed her BA Honours degree in Classics in 1901. From Huguenot she went to Newnham College, Cambridge, completing the Classical Tripos in 1906. She stayed on at Cambridge for another year on a Marion Kennedy Scholarship, where she completed research towards her monograph, Six Essays on the Platonic Theory of Knowledge as Expounded in the Latter Dialogues and Reviewed by Aristotle (Cambridge University Press, 1908).[1]

She returned to South Africa, and Huguenot College, eventually taking up the position of Chair of Greek. Resigning from Huguenot College, she relocated to Johannesburg, and in 1923 took up the position of Senior Lecturer in Greek at the University of Witwatersrand, where she remained until retirement. She died in Johannesburg in 1955, aged 72.

Apart from her monograph, she also published articles in a number of scholarly periodicals, such as The Classical Review and the Proceedings and Selected Papers of the Classical Association of South Africa.

References

  1. Jeffrey Murray, '"These are our Jewels": Women and Classical Education at Huguenot College' Acta Classica 57 (2014), 105–126.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Williams, Marie V.. Six essays on the Platonic theory of knowledge as expounded in the later dialogues and reviewed by Aristotle. 1908. Cambridge, Eng. : The University Press. PIMS - University of Toronto.