Philip Arthur Ashworth Explained

Philip Arthur Ashworth (1853–1921), was a British international lawyer, barrister and jurist. He was the author, editor and translator of numerous works covering legal, constitutional, historic and military topics, and a leading authority on European jurisprudence and the Constitution of the United Kingdom and British colonies.

Early life and education

He was the eldest son of the Rev John Ashworth Ashworth, rector of Didcot in Berkshire. His father had been a Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford, until resigning on marriage in 1851, when his college preferred him to the rectory of All Saints, Didcot which he occupied for 39 years. The Perpendicular west window of the church is a memorial to the Ashworth family.[1]

Philip Arthur Ashworth was educated at Sherborne School, subsequently graduating with a BA from New College, Oxford in Classics and Law in 1875.[2] He went on to study at the University of Bonn, the University of Leipzig and the University of Würzburg, from which he emerged as a Doctor of Jurisprudence.[3]

In 1881 Ashworth was called to the bar in England (Inner Temple). He practised for a while in London and was briefly an advocate of the Courts of Cyprus; but he then concentrated on research and writing about international jurisprudence and English constitutional law and administration.[4]

Works

Ashworth was a prolific author, editor and translator of works on legal, constitutional, historic and military topics, with a reputation for writing "with scrupulous care and accurate scholarship",[5] whether in English or in German. Amongst other works and many papers, he was the author of:

As an editor, Ashworth was tasked with revising the 5th, 6th and 7th editions of:

He was the first translator into English of major German legal, history and military works including:

Ashworth was also asked to contribute articles to Encyclopaedia Britannica's 10th and 11th editions on Alsace-Lorraine, Bavaria, Berlin, Germany, Heinrich Rudolf Hermann Friedrich von Gneist, Rudolf von Jhering, Lübeck, Rhine, and Eduard von Simson.[6]

Family

On 15 April 1879 Dr Ashworth married Emma Charlotte Marie Leontina Von Estorff, Baroness von Estorff (1853–1935)[7] (née Sonntag), whose younger sister, Elizabeth, was a musician and composer who married the academic historian and classicist Sir James Wycliffe Headlam-Morley.[8] Philip and Emma Ashworth lived in Victoria Street, Westminster and their country house in Berkshire, until retiring in 1902 to Kent.[9] Dr Ashworth died in Paris in 1921. His widow died in Oxfordshire in 1935.[10]

By the late twentieth century, Dr Ashworth's childhood home, now the Old Rectory at Didcot, had become home to another Oxford historian with a keen interest in German militarism, Hugh Trevor-Roper, Lord Dacre.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England & Wales, 1894-5. 6 March 2019.
  2. Web site: The Sherborne Register 1550–1950. Old Shirbirnian Society. 16 February 2019.
  3. Who's Who, Volume 72, A & C Black, 1920
  4. Web site: Joseph Foster, Men at the Bar, 2nd Edition, 1885. 6 March 2019.
  5. Web site: J Chapman, The Westminster Review, Volume 164, 1905. 1905. 6 March 2019.
  6. Author:Philip Arthur Ashworth.
  7. Dresden, Deutschland, Heiratsregister, 1876–1922
  8. Who's Who, Volume 72, A & C Black, 1920
  9. Kelly's Directory of Kent, 1903
  10. Web site: Else Headlam-Morley Papers. Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections. 6 March 2019.
  11. Web site: Duncan Fallowell, Hugh Trevor-Roper, Prospect Magazine, March 20, 2003. 6 March 2019.