Peter Giles

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Peter Giles
D.Litt
Giles, Peter.jpg
Born 1860
Died 1935
Residence Emmanuel College Lodge, Cambridge
Occupation academic
philologist
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
left 1935 deceased
elected_AI 1921.12.18




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1921.11.15 proposed by W.H.R. Rivers, seconded by H.J.E. Peake
death noted in Report of the Council 1935-1936

Notes From Elsewhere

Dr Peter Giles (20 October 1860 – 17 September 1935) was a Scottish philologist and Master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge.
Peter Giles was born at Strichen, Aberdeenshire, on 20 October 1860 and, after graduating from the University of Aberdeen, went up to Cambridge University as a scholar of Gonville and Caius College in 1882.[1] He was placed in the first class in both parts of the Classical Tripos and in the second class in history.
After attending the lectures of Karl Brugmann at Freiburg and Leipzig, Giles brought the ideas of the Neo-grammarians to England in his only publication, A Short Manual of Comparative Philology for Classical Students, published in 1895 and subsequently translated into German.
Giles succeeded John Peile as the Reader in comparative philology at Cambridge in 1891, a position he retained until his death.
Peter Giles served as the Master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge from 1910 until 1935 and as Vice-Chancellor from 1919-1920. He died in Cambridge, aged 74.

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