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Patrick Wormald


Charles Patrick Wormald (9 July 1947 – 29 September 2004) was a British historian born in Neston, Cheshire, son of historian Brian Wormald.

He attended Eton College as a King's Scholar. From 1965 to 1968, he read modern history at Balliol College, Oxford, where he was tutored by Maurice Keen and farmed out for tutorials with Michael Wallace-Hadrill (at that time a Senior Research Fellow at Merton College, Oxford) and Peter Brown (at that time a Research Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford). Wormald's potential was subsequently recognized by both Merton and All Souls when those Colleges awarded him, respectively, the Harmsworth Senior Scholarship and a seven-year Prize Fellowship.

Wormald taught early medieval history at the University of Glasgow from 1974 to 1988, where his lectures drew huge enthusiasm from students. There he also met and married fellow-historian Jenny Brown. They had two sons, but their marriage was dissolved in 2001. While at Glasgow, he became a participant in the Bucknell Group of early medievalists, hosted by Wendy Davies – the group taking its name from a village on the Welsh-English border where it often met. He delivered the Jarrow Lecture in 1984.

Following a British Academy Research Readership (1987–89), Wormald returned to Oxford in 1989 as a College Lecturer at Christ Church, where he was then appointed a Fellow and University Lecturer from 1990, tutoring students in medieval history. He delivered the Deerhurst Lecture in 1991 and the British Academy's Raleigh Lecture in History in 1995. In 1996 he gave the inaugural Richard Rawlinson Center Congress Lecture at the 31st International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo. His greatest work, which took many years to produce, was The Making of English Law, the first volume of which was published in 1999. Volume II was unfinished at the time of his death, although his extensive preparatory papers for the book have now been published online. Following his early retirement from Christ Church in 2001, he was re-engaged as a Lecturer by the History Faculty at Oxford and entered Wolfson College. He was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 2003, and that year also delivered the Brixworth Lecture.


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