English classical scholar and Dean of King's College, Cambridge
Lancelot Patrick Wilkinson (1 June 1907 – 23 April 1985) was an English classical scholar, a don at the University of Cambridge and Dean of King's College.
After the war, Wilkinson returned to Cambridge as a Fellow of King's College and was also Reader in Latin Literature in the university. His major publications include Horace and his Lyric Poetry and The Georgics of Virgil.[5] He published a memoir of Sir John Sheppard.[6]
A reviewer said of his Ovid Recalled (1955) “Mr Wilkinson’s approach is almost unfashionable. It is purely literary; he offers no glittering fantasies or jerks of invention, but is content to let Ovid be his own interpreter.”[7]
With his friend Robert Bolgar, between 1969 and 1977 Wilkinson organized a series of international conferences at Cambridge with the title "Classical Influences on European Culture".[9] He became Dean of King's College.[4]
Wilkinson died in Cambridge in April 1985, leaving an estate valued at £97,206.[10]
Selected publications
Ovid Recalled (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1955)
Horace and his Lyric Poetry (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1951)
The Georgics of Virgil: a Critical Survey (London: Cambridge University Press, 1969)
Golden Latin Artistry (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1963)
Kingsmen of a Century: 1873–1972 (Cambridge: King's College, 1980),
A Century of King’s 1873–1972 (Cambridge: King's College, 1980)
Le Keux's Engravings of Victorian Cambridge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981) ISBN9780521303507
'The Augustan Rules for Dactylic Verse', Classical Quarterly 34 (1940), 30–43
'Greek Influence on the Poetry of Ovid' in L'influence grecque sur la poésie latine de Catulle à Ovide (1953), 223–243
'Pindar and the Proem to the Third Georgic', in W. Wimmel ed., Forschungen zur römischen Literatur: Festschrift zum 60 (1970)
Notes
^"Lancelot Patrick Wilkinson" (obituary) in The Times, 25 April 1985, page 14
^Christopher Smith, The Hidden History of Bletchley Park: A Social and Organisational History, 1939–1945 (2015), p. 46
^Richard Langhorne, Diplomacy and Intelligence During the Second World War (2004), p. 37
^ abA. Deavours, David Kahn, Louis Kruh, Cryptology: Machines, History, & Methods Vol. 2 (1989), p. 107: ”Patrick Wilkinson (1907–1985) was the Dean of King's College, Cambridge, and a lecturer in classics at Cambridge. He worked in the Italian naval subsection until 1943. From March to August 1943, he was first in Algiers and then in Malta, where he worked in the Lascaris Bastion.”
^Christopher Brooke, Christopher N. L. Brooke, Damian Riehl Leader A History of the University of Cambridge: Volume 4, 1870–1990 (Cambridge University Press, 1988), p. 126
^R. G. Austin, “L. P. Wilkinson, Ovid Recalled. Cambridge: University Press, 1955. Pp. XVIII + 484, with one plate. 37s. 6d.” in The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 46, Issues 1-2, November 1956, 213–214
^David Rowland, Mervyn Cooke, The Cambridge Companion to Benjamin Britten (Cambridge University Press, 1999),
p. 327
^"DR ROBERT BOLGAR" (obituary) in The Times, 26 June 1985, p. 14
^”WILKINSON Lancelot Patrick of 21 Marlowe Rd Cambridge died 23 April 1985” in Wills and Administrations (England and Wales) 1985 (1986), p. 9232