Fitzroy Richard Raglan

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Lord; Baron
Fitzroy Richard Raglan
FSA
Raglan, Fitzroy Richard.jpg
Born 1885
Died 1964
Residence 24 Sloane Gardens, SW1
41 St George's Road, SW1 [1923]
Cefntilla Court, Usk, Mon. [1927]
Occupation armed services
literary
anthropologist
aristocracy
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
elected_AI 1921.12.13
societies Society of Antiquaries




Notes

Office Notes

RAI Council 1930-31 Member
RAI Council 1931-32 Member
RAI Council 1933-34 Member
RAI Council 1934-35 Member
RAI Council 1935-36 Member
RAI Council 1937-38 Member
RAI Council 1938-39 Member
RAI Council 1939-40 Member
RAI Council 1940-41 Member
RAI Council 1941-42 Member
RAI Council 1942-43 Member
RAI Council 1943-44 Member
RAI Council 1945-46 Member
RAI Council 1946-47 Member
RAI Council 1947-48 Member
RAI Council 1949-50 Vice President
RAI Council 1950-51 Vice President
RAI Council 1951-52 Vice President
RAI Council 1953-54 Member
RAI Council 1954-55 Member
RAI Council 1955-56 President
RAI Council 1956-57 President

House Notes

1921.11.15 proposed by C.G. Seligman, seconded by E.N. Fallaize

Notes From Elsewhere

Fitzroy Richard Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan (10 June 1885 – 14 September 1964) was a British soldier, author, and amateur anthropologist. He is best known for his book The Hero, A Study in Tradition, Myth and Drama in which he demonstrates that the life stories of many figures from myth and legend follow a common pattern of events, supporting his thesis that this pattern is drawn from the narrative of a ritual drama.
FitRoy Richard Somerset, heir to the peerage title Baron Raglan, was born on 10 June 1885 to George Fitzroy Henry Somerset, 3rd Baron Raglan and his wife Lady Ethel Jemima Ponsonby.[1] He was educated at Eton and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, and received a commission as Second lieutenant in the Militia regiment the Royal Monmouthshire Royal Engineers on 10 June 1902.[2] In 1905 he entered the British Army and was commissioned in the Grenadier Guards. His military career included working as an aide-de-camp to the governor of Hong Kong, service in the Egyptian army from 1913 to 1919, district commissioner in Sudan and as a political officer in Palestine and Transjordan. In recognition of his services in Egypt he was made an Officer of the Order of the Nile.[3] He retired from the military in 1922 with the rank of major.[4]
With the death of his father in 1921, he assumed the title 4th Baron Raglan and, after retiring from the army, returned to his ancestral home, Cefntilla Court near Usk in Monmouthshire. He was very active in local affairs. He was a Justice of the Peace for the county as early as 1909 and served for twenty-one years (1928–49) as a member of the former Monmouthshire county council . He took a great interest in the Boy Scout movement and was county commissioner for Monmouthshire for twenty seven years (1927–54). He served as Lord Lieutenant of Monmouthshire from 1942 until 1964.[1]
During his life he studied and wrote on topics in areas such as anthropology, political science, and architecture. His interest in the antiquities of Monmouthshire led him to write, with Sir Cyril Fox, three volumes on the county's medieval and later domestic architecture. In 1933 he became president of Section H (Anthropology) of the British Association for the Advancement of Science , and from 1945 to 1947 he served as president of the Folklore Society . He was chairman of the art and archaeology committee of the National Museum of Wales (1949–51) and president of the National Museum of Wales from 1957 to 1962. He was also president of the Royal Anthropological Institute from 1955 to 1957.[3]
On 9 April 1923 Raglan married Julia Hamilton, daughter of Lt.-Col. Robert Hamilton-Udny, 11th Lord Belhaven and Stenton by his marriage to Kathleen Gonville Bromhead. The Lord and Lady Raglan had five children, the first of whom died a few days after birth.
Lady Raglan's also contributed to the study of folklore. In an article in the journal Folklore in 1939, she coined the term "Green Man" to describe the foliate heads found in English churches. Her theory on their origin is still debated.
Lord Raglan was also the source of various controversies over the course of his life. In 1938 he declared his wish to give up his job at the Ministry of Information on the grounds that he was not doing enough work to justify his salary. In 1958 he agitated Welsh nationalist feelings by declaring Welsh a ‘moribund’ language. Demands were made for his resignation from the National Museum of Wales, but he stood fast. (The motto of the Raglan barony is Mutare vel timere sperno: ‘I scorn to change or to fear’).[1][5]
Lord Raglan died on 14 September 1964[6] at age 79 and was buried in the family plot in the Church of St John, Llandenny.

Publications

External Publications

Jocasta's Crime: An Anthropological Study, Methuen (London), 1933, Fertig (New York, NY), 1991
The Science of Peace, Methuen, 1933, reprinted by Pierides Press, 2007 ISBN 978-1406789171
If I Were Dictator, Methuen, 1934 (contributor)
The Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth and Drama, Methuen, 1936, reprinted by Dover Publication, 2011 ISBN 978-0486427089
How Came Civilisation?, Methuen, 1939
Death and Rebirth, C. A. Watts, 1945
The Origins of Religion, C. A. Watts, 1949 (With Cyril Fox) Monmouthshire Houses, Parts I-III, National Museum of Wales, 1951–54 ISBN 978-0720003987
The Temple and the House, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1964, Norton (New York, NY), 1965

House Publications

1942.10.27 read The future of social anthropology

Related Material Details

RAI Material

census

Other Material