Difference between revisions of "Bertram Coghill Windle"
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Latest revision as of 05:45, 23 January 2021
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
Proposed by A.C. Haddon; seconded by J.L. Myres, J.G. Garson, William Gowland, 1902.05.13
Notes From Elsewhere
Sir Bertram Coghill Alan Windle, M.A., M.D., Sc.D., Ph.D., LL.D., F.R.S., F.S.A., K.S.G., (8 May 1858 – 14 February 1929) was a British anatomist, administrator, archaeologist, scientist, educationalist and writer.[1][2]
He was born at Mayfield Vicarage, in Staffordshire, where his father, the Reverend Samuel Allen Windle, a Church of England clergyman, was vicar.[3] He attended Trinity College, where he graduated B.A. in 1879. He also served as Librarian of the University Philosophical Society in the 1877–78 session. Later he became a Fellow of the Royal Society. In 1891 he was appointed dean of the medical faculty of Queen's College, Birmingham. Queen's College's medical faculty became the medical faculty of Mason Science College in the early 1890s, and then became the medical faculty of the University of Birmingham in 1900. Windle was professor of anatomy and anthropology and first Dean of the Medical Faculty at Birmingham University. In 1904 he accepted the presidency of Queen's College, Cork.[4] Professor Windle married twice, first to Madeleine Hudson, and in 1901 to Edith Mary Nazer.
Windle was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1899.[5] He died in 1929 aged 71.[6][7] His conversion to Catholicism influenced many.
In 1909, he was made a knight of St. Gregory the Great by Pius X.
Publications
External Publications
Congenital Malformations and Heredity (1888).
The Birmingham School of Medicine (1890). The Proportions of the Human Body (1892). The Modern University (1892).
A Philological Essay Concerning the Pygmies of the Ancients (1894)
A Handbook of Surface Anatomy and Landmarks (1896).
Life in Early Britain (1897).
Shakespeare's Country (1899).
Vitalism and Scholasticism (1900).
The Malvern Country (1901).
The Wessex of Thomas Hardy (1902).
Chester (1904).
Remains of the Prehistoric Age in England (1904).
What is Life? A Study of Vitalism and Neo-Vitalism (1908).
Facts and Theories (1912).
A Century of Scientific Thought and Other Essays (1915).
The Church and Science (1917).[8]
Science and Morals and other Essays (1919). The Romans in Britain (1923).
On Miracles and Some Other Matters (1924). Who's Who of the Oxford Movement (1926).
Evolution and Catholicity (1926).
The Catholic Church and its Reactions with Science (1927).
The Evolutionary Problem as it is Today (1927).
Religions Past and Present (1928; 1st Pub. 1927).
History as it is Taught (1928).
House Publications
Related Material Details
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