- Robin Donkin
Robin Arthur Donkin (born Robert Arthur) (1928-2006) was a British
historian andgeographer Glasscock : May 10, 2006] who served as a reader inHistorical Geography inCambridge University 's Department of Geography in 1990.Jenkins,University of Cambridge ] A fellow of theBritish Academy , Donkin published works on a wide range of subjects, includingCistercian monasteries, agricultural terracing, the history ofpearl s andpearl fishing , theMuscovy duck , theGuinea fowl , and the history ofspice s andaromatics .The Itinerant Geographer]Early life
Robert Donkin was born in 1928 in the town of Morpeth,
Northumberland , where he received his education atJarrow Grammar School , and later took geography in 1950 at King's College,Newcastle upon Tyne . InDurham University , Donkin completed his doctorate under M.R.G. Conzen, published later in 1957 as "The Cistercian Contribution to the Geography of England and Wales in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries".Donkin also served in the
British Armed Forces as aLieutenant in theRoyal Artillery . [LondonGazette|issue=40239|supp=yes|startpage=4376|endpage=4377|date=23 July 1954 |accessdate=2007-12-19] [LondonGazette|issue=40639|supp=yes|startpage=6632|date=22 November 1955 |accessdate=2007-12-19] [LondonGazette|issue=40691|supp=yes|startpage=491|date=20 January 1956 |accessdate=2007-12-19] [LondonGazette|issue=41657|supp=yes|startpage=1808|date=13 March 1959 |accessdate=2007-12-19] HisNational Service postings includedEgypt andJordan , where he saw field work. He was elected King George VI Research Fellow at theUniversity of California, Berkeley in 1955. It was here that he was influenced by the American cultural geographerCarl O. Sauer , and developed interest in agricultural origins and theaboriginal New World . Donkin returned to Britain in 1956, where he served on the staff of theUniversity of Edinburgh Geography Department for the next two years.Later contributions
Donkin published a number of papers on Cistercian farming activity, introducing a new geographical dimension to monastic studies. Among his notable contributions to the field of historical geography is a 60-page synthesis on "Changes in the Early Middle Ages", which was contributed by him to the "A New Historical Geography of England", published in 1973. Academic interest in Middle America eventually led Donkin to Cambridge University, where he earned a Fellowship at
Jesus College, Cambridge , and served as a distinguished historical geographer.Donkin's work "Beyond Price: pearls and pearl-fishing, origins to the Age of Discoveries" in 1998 - a work containing a mammoth 60 page bibliography - was published as a memoir of the
American Philosophical Society . In 2003, Donkin produced "Between East and West: the Moluccas and the traffic in spices up to the arrival of Europeans", a book on maritime explorations in theAtlantic Ocean and theIndian Ocean .Donkin traveled to
North Africa , Middle America,South America ,South India ,South China and toChinese Turkestan . His final work was an incomplete analysis of the cultural geography ofmaize ."
The Independent ", (London ),May 10 ,2006 summed up Donkin's life as follows:Robert Arthur Donkin, geographer: born Morpeth, Northumberland 28 October 1928' King George VI Memorial Fellow, University of California, Berkeley 1955-56' Assistant Lecturer, Department of Geography, Edinburgh University 1956-58' Lecturer, Department of Geography, Birmingham University 1958-70' Lecturer in the Geography of Latin America, Cambridge University 1971-90, Reader in Historical Geography 1990-96 (Emeritus)' Fellow, Jesus College, Cambridge 1972- 96 (Emeritus), Tutor 1975-96' FBA1985' married 1970 Jennifer Kennedy (one daughter)' died Cambridge 1 February 2006.
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