- Source: George Henry Tupling
George Henry Tupling (1883 – 1962) was a British historian who was Vice-President of the Chetham Society and President and Editor of the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society.
Life
Tupling was educated at the University of London gaining a Bachelors BSc(Econ) degree then proceeded to MA and PhD. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He was one of the first to apply modern approaches to the study of local economic history in his Economic History of Rossendale (1927).
He was a Member of the Chetham Society, elected as Council Member in 1934 and then Vice-President in 1938 and later a Member of Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society from 1960. He was also involved in the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society, being a Council Member from 1933 to 1961, twice Editor (1934–8 and 1949–54), President (1946–9) and Vice-President (1949–61).
Select bibliography
The Economic History of Rossendale, Chetham Society, New Series, 86 (1927).
“The Royal and Seignorial Bailiffs of Lancashire in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries”, Chetham Miscellanies VIII, Chetham Society, New Series, 109 (1945).
South Lancashire in the reign of Edward II: As illustrated by the pleas at Wigan recorded in Coram Rege roll no. 254, Chetham Society, Third Series, 1 (1949).
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- George Henry Tupling
- Tupling
- Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society
- William Henry Chaloner
- George William Daniels
- W. R. Ward
- Musbury Tor
- Chetham Society
- Battle of Burton Bridge (1322)
- Kirkham, Lancashire