Paget Toynbee
Paget Jackson Toynbee, FBA was a British Dante scholar. Robert Hollander has described Toynbee as 'the most influential Dantean scholar of his time'.
Life
He was born in Wimbledon, London, the third son of otolaryngologist Joseph Toynbee and his wife Harriet. One of nine children, he was the brother of the economic historian Arnold Toynbee and Grace Frankland; and the uncle of universal historian Arnold J. Toynbee and Jocelyn Toynbee.He was educated at Haileybury College, and matriculated at Balliol College, Oxford in January 1874, aged 19 where he read Classics; B.A. 1878, M.A. 1880; he gained a D. Litt in 1901. After spending some years as a private tutor, including periods in Cape Colony in 1881 and Japan and Australia 1886–87, he decided to concentrate on literary research and writing. Beginning with Old French language and literature, he turned to Dante, compiling the index to Tutte le opere di Dante Alighieri, the "Oxford Dante", edited by Edward Moore. He continued to publish significant works about Dante and papers in academic journals between 1898 and 1924. According to C. M. Ady, "his exhaustive memory and tireless energy won him a worldwide reputation as a Dantist."
He was the honorary secretary of the Oxford Dante Society from 1916 to 1928; he was elected Fellow of the British Academy in 1919, and Honorary Fellow of Balliol in 1922, and later donated some books to the college library. He was awarded an honorary degree of LLD by the University of Edinburgh in 1923.
Toynbee also provided thousands of quotations for the Oxford English Dictionary.
Personal life
Toynbee married Helen Wrigley on 23 August 1894 in Burnham, Buckinghamshire, where they later built a house named Fiveways. She spent the rest of her life editing the letters of Horace Walpole, but died suddenly in 1910 after an operation. The couple had no children, and apart from a tame robin for company he became a virtual recluse for the rest of his life although he sometimes stayed in Oxford with another Dante specialist, William W. Jackson.It seems that Toynbee had been assisting his wife in her literary endeavours for many years, and after her death he completed her three unfinished volumes of letters from Marie du Deffand to Walpole, published in 1912. He also edited the three supplementary volumes to her edition of Walpole's Letters, published 1918–1925.
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Works
Books
- Oxford: Clarendon Press
- . Rewritten and enlarged by Toynbee. Oxford: Clarendon Press
- ed. Edward Moore.. Index compiled by Toynbee. London: Enrico Frowde, Editore
- . Revised by Charles S. Singleton
- 4th, revised & enlarged ed. London: Methuen & Co.
- The Vision of Dante Alighieri . Translated by Henry Francis Cary. Revised with an introduction by Toynbee. London: Methuen & Co. • •
- . London: Methuen & Co.
- Dante in English Literature from Chaucer to Cary London: Methuen & Co. •
- Oxford: Clarendon Press
- The Correspondence of Gray, Walpole, West and Ashton . Editor. •
- Oxford: Clarendon Press. Editor
- Oxford: Clarendon Press
- British Academy. London: Humphrey Milton, Oxford University Press
- Reminiscences Written by Mr. Horace Walpole in 1788 for the Amusement of Miss Mary and Miss Agnes Berry, Now First Printed in Full from the Original Ms. With Notes and Index by Toynbee. Oxford: Clarendon Press
- The Letters of Horace Walpole. ed. Helen Wrigley Toynbee. 16 volumes. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Editor of Supplements • •
- Correspondence of Thomas Gray. . Oxford: Clarendon Press. Editor with Leonard Whibley. • • NB Free registration needed to borrow for 1 hour at a time.
Journal articles
- . In: Romania, tome 21 n°82, 1892. pp. 228–239.
- . In: Romania, tome 24 n°94, 1895. pp. 277–278.
- . In: Romania, tome 24 n°95, 1895. pp. 376–384.
- . Annual Report of the Dante Society, 1899.
- , in Seventeenth annual report of the Dante Society 1898. Boston: Ginn & Company, p. 33.
- . In: Romania, tome 29 n°115, 1900. pp. 403–415.
- . In: Romania, tome 29 n°116, 1900. pp. 559–564.
- Review article: . In: Romania, tome 33 n°129, 1904. pp. 103–104.
- in The twenty-fourth annual report of the Dante Society 1905. Boston: Ginn & Company
- Review article: . In: Romania, tome 39 n°153, 1910. pp. 114–116.
- in The twenty-ninth annual report of the Dante Society 1910
- in The thirty-sixth annual report of the Dante Society 1917
- 'Dante in English art' in The thirty-eighth annual report of the Dante Society 1919
- 'The Oxford Dante' in ''The forty-second, forty-third, and forty-fourth annual report of the Dante Society 1926''
Legacy
In the years immediately before his death, Toynbee donated manuscripts, papers and correspondence relating to Dante and to Horace Walpole to the Bodleian Library and other Oxford libraries. Further papers were bequeathed by him in 1932.The Paget Toynbee lectures on Dante have taken place annually in Oxford since 1995.
The current Paget Toynbee Lecturer in Italian Medieval Studies at Balliol College is Professor Elena Lombardi.