Marjorie Chibnall | |
---|---|
Born |
Atcham, Shropshire |
27 September 1915
Died | 23 June 2012 Sheffield |
(aged 96)
Nationality | British |
Fields | Medieval History |
Institutions | Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, Girton College, Cambridge. |
Alma mater | University of Cambridge |
Thesis | 'The English priories and manors of the abbey of Bec-Hellouin' (1942) |
Doctoral advisor | Eileen Power |
Spouse | Charles Chibnall |
Marjorie Morgan McCallum Chibnall OBE FBA (27 September 1915 – 23 June 2012) was an English historian, medievalist and Latin translator. She edited Historia Ecclesiastica by Orderic Vitalis.
Born to a farming family at Atcham in Shropshire in 1915, Chibnall was educated at Shrewsbury Priory County Girls School and Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, where she was taught by Evelyn Jamison, V. H. Galbraith and F. M. Powicke.
In 1947, she married the biochemist and amateur medieval historian Charles Chibnall, who died in 1988. Chibnall died in Sheffield on 23 June 2012, at the age of 96, and was survived by their son and daughter, Mary and John, and by two step-daughters, Joan and Cicely.
Marjorie Chibnall took her BLitt at the University of Cambridge on the topic of ecclesiastical law, before moving to a study of the relations between the mighty Bec Abbey in Normandy and its dependent English priories for her doctorate. She completed her doctorate in 1939 under the supervision of the renowned economic historian Eileen Power. Her early career was spent teaching at the University of Southampton (1941–43) and the University of Aberdeen (1943–47).
Chibnall was from 1947 a lecturer in history at Girton College, Cambridge, and from 1953 a fellow of the college, but she relinquished her positions there in 1965 in order to complete her editorial work on the Historia Ecclesiastica of Orderic Vitalis. Four years later she was made a research fellow and subsequently a fellow of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, and an honorary fellow of Girton College.