- Sharon Turner
Sharon Turner (
September 24 ,1768 -February 13 ,1847 ) was ahistorian . Born inPentonville , Turner was the eldest son of William and Ann Turner,Yorkshire natives who had settled inLondon upon marrying. He left school at fifteen to be articled to an attorney in the Temple. OnJanuary 18 ,1795 he married Mary Watts ("bap." 1768, d. 1843), with whom he had at least six children. Among these were Sydney, inspector of reformatory schools, and Mary, married to the economist William Ellis.Turner became a solicitor but left the profession after he became interested in the study of Icelandic and
Anglo-Saxon literature . He settled himself in Red Lion Square near theBritish Museum , staying there for sixteen years. Utilizing his access to rare materials, he was the first serious scholar to examine the migrations of the Anglo-Saxon peoples. The results of his researches were published in his "History of the Anglo-Saxons " (1799-1805), appearing in several subsequent editions. Thereafter he continued the narrative in "History of England " (1814-29), concluding with the end of the reign ofElizabeth I . Against the emergence of theFrench Consulate , he promoted the notion of Anglo-Saxon liberty as opposed to Norman tyranny (strong since the 17th century).These histories, especially the former, though somewhat marred by an attempt to emulate the grandiose style of Gibbon, were works of real research opening up and to a considerable extent developing a new field of inquiry in the area of Anglo-Saxon history.
For example,
Herodotus reported the Persians called theScythians “Sakai,” and Sharon Turner identified these very people as the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxons. In carefully determining their origins in the Caucusus, Turner wrote: “The migrating Scythians crossed the Araxes, passed out of Asia, and suddenly appeared in Europe in the sixth century B.C… The names Saxon, Scythian and Goth are used interchangeably.”Turner also authored a "
Sacred History of the World ," a translation of "Beowulf " and a poem on Richard III. He advised his friendIsaac D'Israeli to baptize his children (Benjamin included) in order to give them a better chance in life.Turner's place as a historian has been debated by later generations of academics.
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