Andrew Lang

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Andrew Lang
Lang, Andrew.jpg
Born 1844
Died 1912
Residence Spanish Place Manchester
35 Weymouth Street [1862]
77 Harley Street, Cavendish Square [1867]
Dunmore Teignmouth [1868]
1 Marloes Road, Kensington, W [1899]
Occupation literary
Society Membership
membership ESL, AI Ordinary Fellow
left 1912 deceased
elected_ESL 1861.04.03
elected_AI

1861

1899.01.24
clubs Athenaeum Club
societies Folklore Society
Society for Psychical Research
British Academy



Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1899.01.10 proposed

two of this name - same?

Notes From Elsewhere

Andrew Lang (31 March 1844 – 20 July 1912) was a Scots poet, novelist, literary critic, and contributor to the field of anthropology. He is best known as a collector of folk and fairy tales. The Andrew Lang lectures at the University of St Andrews are named after him.

Member of the Athenaeum Club from 1883

Born Selkirk; died Banchory.
Fellow of Merton College, Oxford 1868-75. Thereafter lived in London working as a writer. Prolific output in many fields including anthropology, history, classics and folklore. Honorary degrees from Oxford and St Andrews.

He was only 17 when he joined the ESL in 1861 which was the year he went up to St Andrew’s. He spent three years there, then a year at Glasgow University before coming up to Balliol in 1865. He got a First in Classical Mods and then Lit Hum in 1868. The same year he was elected to an open fellowship at Merton. He stayed there until he married in 1875 when he moved to London. His undergraduate days at Balliol where contemporary with the existence of the Oxford Anthropological Society but we have no evidence that he was involved with it although it would seem odd if he did not, unless, of course, its connection with the ASL was sufficient to deter him. What we do know is that he engaged with another Oxford anthropologist, Max Müller. Lang criticised Müller’s philological theory of myth, in series of papers the first of which. ‘Mythology and fairy tales’ was published in 1873 while Lang was still at Merton. He became a Fellow of the AI and stayed one until his death. [Peter Riviere]

Publications

External Publications

folk and fairy tales

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material

University of St Andrews [papers]
PRM