Penry Williams (historian)

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Penry Herbert Williams (25 February 1925 – 30 April 2013) was a Welsh historian of Elizabethan Britain.[1]

Early life

He was born in Calcutta to a father from Brecknockshire and he was educated at Marlborough College.[2] During the Second World War Williams served in India and Java as a member of the Royal Artillery. He then read history at New College, Oxford, where J. E. Neale suggested he study Wales under the government of Elizabeth I.[3] His doctoral thesis, The Council in the Marches of Wales under Elizabeth I, was published in 1958.[4]

Academic career

He taught history at the Victoria University of Manchester from 1951 until 1964 and at New College from 1964 until 1992.[3]

In his 1979 work, The Tudor Regime, Williams repudiated Geoffrey Elton's focus on the central administrative institutions of government in The Tudor Revolution in Government, and instead asserted the importance of local patronage and favouritism.[4][1] Williams argued that "the strength of Tudor government lay in a skilful combination of the formal and the informal, the official and the personal".[4]

He edited The English Historical Review from 1982 until 1990.[4] He wrote The Later Tudors: England, 1547–1603 (1995) for the New Oxford History of England series.[3]

Personal life

Williams married in 1952.[1] His politics were moderately left-wing; he first supported Labour, then the SDP and finally the Liberal Democrats. He also campaigned on behalf of asylum seekers, including those held at Campsfield House immigration detention centre, which he frequently visited.[1]

Works

Books

  • The Council in the Marches of Wales under Elizabeth I (University of Wales Press, 1958). ISBN 0708300464
  • Life in Tudor England (London: B. T. Batsford, 1964). ISBN 0713414588
  • The Tudor Regime (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1979). ISBN 0198224915
  • The Later Tudors: England, 1547–1603 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995). ISBN 0198228201
  • (with Mark Nicholls), Sir Walter Raleigh: In Life and Legend (London: Bloomsbury Continuum, 2011). ISBN 144111209X

Articles

  • ‘Dr. Elton's Interpretation of the Age’, Past & Present, No. 25 (Jul., 1963), pp. 3–8.
  • ‘The Tudor State’, Past & Present, No. 25 (Jul., 1963), pp. 39–58.
  • (with G. L. Harriss), ‘A Revolution in Tudor History?’, Past & Present, No. 31 (Jul., 1965), pp. 87–96.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Stephen Bates, ‘Penry Williams obituary’, The Guardian (15 May 2013). Retrieved on 13 November 2020.
  2. ^ George Bernard and Robert Evans, ‘Penry Williams (1925—2013)’, The English Historical Review, Vol. 129, No. 537 (April 2014), pp. 267–268.
  3. ^ a b c Bernard and Evans, p. 268.
  4. ^ a b c d Bernard and Evans, p. 267.