Nigel Wilson (classicist)
Nigel Guy Wilson is a British scholar, emeritus fellow and tutor in Classics, Lincoln College, Oxford. His field of research is ancient Greek history, language and literature, and culture, art and archaeology of the Byzantine world.
Since retiring in 2002 he has continued his researches into Greek palaeography, textual criticism and the history of classical scholarship. He edited Sophocles, Aristophanes and Herodotus for the Oxford Classical Texts, each coming with a critical companion. He also critically edited the scholia to Aristophanes' Knights and Acharnians, Menander Rhetor's treatise, the Historical Miscellany by Claudius Aelianus, and Pietro Bembo's Speech in defense of Greek Literature. He also published an anthology of Byzantine prose and translated Basil the Great's Address to Young Men.
Another substantial piece of work was a contribution to the study of the famous Archimedes Palimpsest, which was sold at auction in New York in 1998 for $2,000,000; the results of a collaboration lasting ten years and involving experts in various fields appeared in The Archimedes palimpsest, which was described by the reviewer in the TLS as "the most beautiful book produced in this century". He is a trustee of the Herculaneum Society, and an editor of the series published for the Society by Walter [de Gruyter|Walter De Gruyter], along with Alessandro Barchiesi, Robert Fowler, and Lucia Prauscello. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1980, which awarded him the Kenyon Medal for distinguished contributions to scholarship.