John V. Luce


John Victor Luce was an Irish classicist, professor and Fellow of Classics at Trinity College Dublin. He was also the College's Public Orator between 1971 and 2005.
Luce entered Trinity in 1938 to read Classics, and was List of Scholars of [Trinity College Dublin|elected a Scholar] in his first year, a highly unusual achievement. He took a double Moderatorship in Classics and Philosophy and was awarded Gold Medals for both subjects. He was Auditor of the College Classical Society in 1942–43. He was elected a Fellow of Trinity in 1948 and served as Erasmus Smith's Professor of Oratory until 1989.
John Luce was the son of Arthur Aston Luce, the longest serving fellow of TCD. He was also the nephew of Gordon Hannington Luce, the noted scholar of Burmese and Asian History and Bloomsbury group member, and first cousin of Rex Warner, classicist and author of novels such as The Aerodrome.
An avid sportsman in his youth represented Ireland in Hockey in the 1940s, and also played Squash and Cricket. He was a keen Chess player and played for Rathmines Chess Club in the Leinster Leagues.

Partial bibliography

The End of Atlantis: New Light on an Old Legend, London 1969The Quest for Ulysses, London 1974Homer and the Heroic Age, London 1975Trinity College Dublin: The First 400 Years, Dublin 1991An Introduction to Greek Philosophy, London 1992Orationes Dublinienses Selectae , Dublin 1991Celebrating Homer's Landscapes: Troy and Ithaca Revisited, New Haven 1999Orationes Dublinienses Selectae II , Dublin 2004