- Harold Hanbury
Harold Greville Hanbury (
19 June 1898 atCompton Verney House ,Warwickshire –12 March 1993 atPinetown , Natal,South Africa ) wasVinerian Professor of English Law at theUniversity of Oxford from 1949 to 1964.Biography
He was the only child of Basil Hanbury and his wife, Patience, née Verney, a daughter of Henry Verney, eighteenth Baron Willoughby de Broke.
He was educated at Charterhouse and took up a Classical Scholarship at
Brasenose College, Oxford , in 1915, but interrupted his studies for military service in theBritish Army in 1916, returning to complete his degree after the end of the war. In 1921 he was elected aFellow of Lincoln College, and an Honorary Fellow in 1949.In that year he was appointed
Vinerian Professor of English Law , which carried with it a Fellowship at All Souls College. He remained there until his retirement in 1964, after which he was Dean of the Law Faculty of theUniversity of Nigeria until 1966. He was afterwards a champion of theBiafra n cause, and published in 1968 "Biafra: A Challenge to the Conscience of Britain".In 1980 Margaret, Hanbury's wife, whom he had married in 1927 (a niece of the Danish pathologist
Georges Dreyer ), died, and he left England to live with a god-daughter in Natal, South Africa, where he died in 1993.Hanbury was a highly-regarded figure in the Oxford of his day, on account of his accessible lecturing style and affable personality, and immensely popular with his undergraduates. He was also known for his great fondness for cats, and for years was the Vice-president of the Oxford Cat Club.
Works
His publications were not numerous, but included "Modern Equity", first published in 1935, which ran to 13 editions. Hanbury was a follower of Sir
William Holdsworth , England's leading academic lawyer between the wars, and as his literary executor collaborated in the editing and publication of the last four volumes of Holdsworth's "History of English Law" (1952–66).Sources
* Oxford DNB
* Who Was Who
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