- Alfred Brotherston Emden
Alfred Brotherston Emden (1888–1979) was an
Oxford University historian and Principal ofSt Edmund Hall from 1929 to 1951. He published widely on matters concerning St Edmund Hall and the medieval church. His generous gifts, and life long association with the Hall are honoured with his name being conferred on several buildings and rooms within the college.Early life
Emden, the eldest son of Alfred Charles Emden - a barrister and county-court judge - was born on
22 October 1888 inWest Ealing ,Middlesex Ramsay (2004)] . He held a scholarship at theThe King's School, Canterbury (1903–1907) and Lincoln College, Oxford University from where he graduated in 1911 with a second class degree in modern history.After his graduation, he qualified for the bar at the Inner Temple but instead of practicing law, ran a home for disadvantaged boys in Sydenham ["The Times" (1979)] from 1913 to 1915 and thereafter became schoolmaster at Strand School, Brixton. Shortly after taking up his last post, he enlisted in the
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and served as an Able Seaman on the destroyer HMS "Parker". In 1919, while still enlisted, he accepted a tutorship in Modern history atSt Edmund Hall , Oxford.t Edmund Hall
After arriving at the Hall in 1919, Emden was appointed
Bursar and in 1920, Vice Principal. He was to remain with the Hall for another thirty years. He developed an intense interest in the history of St Edmund Hall on which he produced an article in the "St Edmund Hall Magazine" which he founded in 1920. In 1927 he published "An Oxford Hall in Medieval Times" - a standard history of the college that was republished in 1968 and remained in print until 1972. [Pugh (1980), p. 644]In 1929, he was appointed principal on the retirement of Dr G.B. Allan and shortly thereafter the death of Allan's chosen successor. Emden oversaw the restoration of the old buildings of the Hall and the completion of the
quad in 1934 with buildings on its southside. [Anon. (1934)] A reorganisation of the Hall's constitution in 1937 saw the acquisition of its freehold fromQueen's College which had held it since 1557. Emden tutored in medieval history until 1939.During the
Second World War , Emden was placed in charge of the Oxford University Naval Division as a Lieutenant-commander having persuaded theAdmiralty to raise such divisions in several British universities. During his war service, he accompanied a submarine patrol in the Bay of Biscay.Retirement
After World War Two, Emden's health started to fail and he resigned his Principalship at the age of 63 and was succeeded by his Vice-Principal Rev. J.N.D. Kelly. His retirement did not curtail his academic career and from 1957 to 1959 published "A Biographical Register of the University of Oxford to A.D. 1500" with a similar work on
Cambridge University in 1963. This was followed in 1967 by a "Survey of Dominicans in England" and in 1974 a supplement to "A Biographical Register of the University of Oxford to A.D. 1501-1540".
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