John Saville (born Orestis Stamatopoulos; 2 April 1916 – 13 June 2009) was a Greek-BritishMarxist historian, long associated with the University of Hull. He was an influential writer on British labour history in the second half of the twentieth century, and also known for his multi-volume work, the Dictionary of Labour Biography, edited in collaboration with others.[1]
Life and career
Saville was born Orestis Stamatopoulos in 1916, in the village of Morton, near Gainsborough, Lincolnshire to an English mother and a Greek father.[2][3] Saville's father died while he was an infant.[2] In 1937 he changed his name by deed poll to John Saville, taking the surname of his mother's second husband.[2] He was brought up in Romford.
Saville emerged as one of the supporters of the New Reasoner group of dissident Marxists who condemned the Soviet intervention in Hungary in 1956. Saville became professor of economic history at the University of Hull in 1973, where he had taught since 1947. He was associated with the Socialist Register (editor with Ralph Miliband) and the multi-volume Dictionary of Labour Biography; from 1972 onwards he was one of the editors of the ten-volume Dictionary.
His wife Constance died in 2007. He was survived by their three sons, a daughter, and two granddaughters.
Howell, David; Kirby, Dianne, eds. (2011). John Saville: Commitment and History: Themes from the Life and Work of a Socialist Historian. London: Lawrence & Wishart. ISBN978-1-907103-21-6.