Vivian H. H. Green
Vivian Hubert Howard Green was a Fellow and Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford, a priest, author, teacher, and historian. He was also celebrated for his influence on his pupil at Sherborne School and later at Lincoln College, by John le Carré, who in 1995 acknowledged him as one of the interior models for his spymaster character George Smiley.
Early life and education
Green was born at 101, Thurlby Road, Wembley, Middlesex, England, to Hubert James Green, a law stationer's clerk, and Edith Eleanor Playle, née Howard, daughter of a civil servant. The Greens ran a grocery and confectionery shop at Shanklin on the Isle of Wight, where Edith Green's family lived, from the late 1920s, formerly having had a confectionery shop at Wembley. After a few years the family settled at Minehead in Somerset; Green's mother took additional work at a home for the elderly to help send her son to Bradfield College, Berkshire. Green was not close to his father, whose "personal conduct put strain on marriage". He then won a Goldsmith's scholarship to Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where he achieved a first in the Tripos. At Trinity Hall, he specialised in ecclesiastical history and became the Lightfoot Scholar. Postgraduate work was done on a Gladstone Scholarship to St Deiniol's Library, Hawarden followed by a period of lecturing on ecclesiastical history at St Augustine's College, Canterbury. When asked if he had considered sitting the exams for ordination, he noted that this would pose problems as he was responsible for marking them, but he was ordained in 1939 by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Cosmo Gordon Lang.Ecclesiastical and academic career
- 1939–48 Fellow, St Augustine's College, Canterbury
- 1939 Ordained Deacon
- 1940 Ordained Priest
- 1940–42 Chaplain, Exeter School and St Luke's College, Exeter
- 1942–51 Chaplain and Assistant Master, Sherborne School
- 1951–69 Chaplain, Lincoln College, Oxford
- 1951–83 Fellow and Tutor in History
- 1970–83 Sub-Rector
- 1972–73 Acting Rector
- 1983–87 Rector
- 1987–2005 Honorary Fellow
Published books
Bishop Reginald Pecock: A Study in Ecclesiastical History and Thought The Hanoverians, 1714–1815 From St Augustine to William Temple Renaissance and Reformation The Later Plantagenets: A survey of English history between 1307 and 1485 Oxford Common Room The Young Mr Wesley: A Study of John Wesley and Oxford The Swiss Alps John Wesley Luther and the Reformation, Batsford, London: Methuen, Religion at Oxford and Cambridge A Question of Guilt: The Murder of Nancy Eaton — co-written with William Scoular*