Thomas Bertram Lonsdale Webster FRA FSA (3 July 1905 – 31 May 1974)[1] was a British archaeologist and Classicist, known for his studies of Greek comedy.

Background

He was the son of Sir Thomas Lonsdale Webster. During World War I he attended Charterhouse. As a student at Oxford University, he first studied Greek vases that John Beazley had brought in, but soon switched to Menander and developed a lifelong interest in Greek comedy that resulted in "reconstructions of the plots of lost plays and ... collections of evidence from widely disparate sources bearing on the history of the Greek theater".[2]

Career

He followed William Moir Calder (1880–1960) as Hulme Professor of Greek at Manchester University, a position he held 1931–48, when he was followed by H. D. (Henry) Westlake (1906–92). He then was Professor of Greek at University College London 1948–68 and in 1953 established the Institute of Classical Studies. During World War II he served as an officer in the military intelligence. After his wife, the Classicist A. M. Dale, died in 1967, he moved to Stanford University as professor of classics and as an emeritus.[2]

Awards and honours

Publications

External links

References

Academic offices
Preceded by
Marriott T. Smiley
Professor of Greek, University College London
1948–1968
Succeeded by
Professional and academic associations
Preceded by President of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society
1946–48
Succeeded by