Rachel Bromwich (30 July 1915 – 15 December 2010) born Rachel Sheldon Amos, was a British scholar. Her focus was on medieval Welsh literature, and she taught Celtic Languages and Literature in the Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic at the University of Cambridge, from 1945 to 1976.[1] Among her most important contributions to the study of Welsh literature is Trioedd Ynys Prydein, her edition of the Welsh Triads.
Early life and education
Bromwich was born Rachel Sheldon Amos in Hove, Sussex (some obituaries said Brighton),[2] in 1915, and spent her early childhood in Egypt.[3] Her father, Maurice Amos, was an English legal expert who served as international law adviser to the Egyptian government; her mother, Lucy Scott-Moncrieff Amos, was Scottish. The Amos family were Quakers. The family moved frequently before settling in Cumbria in 1925.[4]
Bromwich taught Old Welsh and Old Irish at Cambridge, beginning in 1945. She was named University Reader in Celtic Languages and Literatures in 1973. She retired from teaching in 1976 and was succeeded by Patrick Sims-Williams.[5] In 1985, she was awarded the degree of D.Litt. by the University of Wales for her services to Welsh scholarship.[4]
In 1961 Bromwich published Trioedd Ynys Prydein, her influential edition of the Welsh Triads. A third, revised edition was published in 2006.[6] This is considered "a central work of the scholarship on medieval Welsh literature", according to her Cambridge obituary.[2] Her other major contribution to Welsh scholarship was her series of books and articles on Dafydd ap Gwilym, the outstanding Welsh poet of the period, mostly summarised in Aspects of the Poetry of Dafydd ap Gwilym (Cardiff, 1985). With D. Simon Evans she produced editions of the major medieval Welsh tale Culhwch and Olwen in both Welsh (1988) and English (1992).[7]
Aspects of the Poetry of Dafydd Ap Gwilym: Collected Papers (1986)[15]
Culhwch ac Olwen: testun Syr Idris Foster wedi ei olygu a'i orffen (1988)[7]
Personal life
In 1939 Rachel Amos married archaeologist and historian John Bromwich (1915-1990),[16] the son of mathematician Thomas John I'Anson Bromwich; they had one son, Brian.[3][17] Rachel Bromwich died in 2010, aged 95 years, in Aberystwyth.[4]
References
^Morgan, Gerald (2005) "A Scholar of Early Britain: Rachel Bromwich (1915– )". In Chance, Jane, Women Medievalists and the Academy pp. 769–781. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN0-299-20750-1.
^Michael Lapidge, 'Introduction', in H. M. Chadwick and the Study of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic in Cambridge, ed. by Michael Lapidge, Cambrian Medieval Celtic Studies, 69/70 (2015) ISBN9780955718298, pp. 1-58 (p. 35).
Edward Watson, "Rachel Bromwich"Clas Merdin (19 December 2010), a blogpost noting the death of Bromwich, with an appreciation of her work as "eloquent and authoritative".