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| T. E. Page | |
|---|---|
| Name | T. E. Page |
| Birth date | 1868 |
| Death date | 1939 |
| Fields | Mathematics, Classical Scholarship |
| Institutions | University of Cambridge, King's College, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press |
| Alma mater | King's College, Cambridge |
T. E. Page
T. E. Page was a British mathematician and classical scholar active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He held positions at King's College, Cambridge and contributed to the editing and translation of classical texts, mathematical instruction, and the administration of academic institutions. His work intersected with contemporary figures and institutions across Cambridge University, Oxford University, and the wider British scholarly community.
Born in 1868, Page was educated at institutions tied to the British Isles's collegiate system and matriculated at King's College, Cambridge. During his time at Cambridge he came under the influence of mathematicians and classicists associated with Trinity College, Cambridge, St John's College, Cambridge, and the broader network of Victorian scholars. His tutors and contemporaries included members of the Royal Society and fellows from colleges such as Pembroke College, Cambridge and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. The educational milieu involved interactions with figures connected to Cambridge Mathematical Tripos, Classical Tripos, and editorial projects linked to Cambridge University Press.
Page's academic career developed within the collegiate system of Cambridge University where he served at King's College, Cambridge. He collaborated with editors and publishers associated with Cambridge University Press and engaged with colleagues from Oxford University Press and institutions such as the British Academy. His professional network included contemporaries connected to Eton College, Harrow School, and other elite schools that supplied candidates to Cambridge University. Administrative responsibilities brought him into contact with officials from the University of London, members of the Clarendon Press circle, and scholars linked to the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies.
Page contributed to the teaching and exposition of classical mathematics and philology, participating in dialogues with scholars from Harvard University, Yale University, and University of Göttingen who were active in classical studies and mathematical history. His editorial and translational work placed him in the same scholarly arena as editors of texts for the Loeb Classical Library, contributors to The Classical Review, and translators associated with the Ancient History corpus. Page's scholarship interacted with the legacies of figures such as Euclid, Archimedes, Plato, Aristotle, and commentators rooted in traditions from Alexandria to Byzantium. His approach linked mathematical exposition with philological rigor practiced by contemporaries at Balliol College, Oxford, Magdalen College, Oxford, and research institutes like the British Museum's Department of Manuscripts.
Page produced editions, translations, and instructional materials produced in collaboration with presses including Cambridge University Press and reviewers affiliated with journals like The Classical Quarterly and Classical Philology. His major works entered conversations with editions published under the aegis of Clarendon Press and collections associated with the Loeb Classical Library, and were cited by scholars from Princeton University, Columbia University, and the University of Edinburgh. Editorial projects linked to his name were examined alongside classical editions produced by editors from Trinity College, Oxford, contributors to the Oxyrhynchus Papyri, and scribal studies emerging from the Bodleian Library and the British Library.
Page's personal connections included associates from Cambridge collegiate life, clerical networks tied to Church of England parishes, and intellectual exchanges with members of the Royal Asiatic Society and the Hellenic Society. His legacy persisted through students and successors at King's College, Cambridge and through citations in bibliographies kept at institutions such as the British Library, the Bibliothèque nationale de France, and university libraries at Cambridge University and Oxford University. Later historians and classicists referenced his editions in catalogues of classical scholarship alongside names from the Victorian era and the early 20th century scholarly revival.
Category:British mathematicians Category:Classical scholars