Edmund Fryde

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Edmund Fryde
Born16 July 1923
Died17 November 1999
OccupationProfessor
Academic background
EducationUniversity of Oxford
ThesisEdward III's war finance 1337-41: transactions in wool and credit operations (1947)
Doctoral advisorGoronwy Edwards
Academic work
DisciplineMedieval history
Sub-disciplineEconomic history, Renaissance studies
InstitutionsUniversity of Aberystwyth (1947–1990)

Edmund Bolesław Fryde, FBA (16 July 1923 – 17 November 1999) was a Polish-born British historian of medieval England and the early Renaissance.

Biography[edit]

Fryde was a son of Mieczysław (Matthew) Fryde, a prominent Polish-Jewish lawyer and economic historian, and Salomea Ludwika (Sarah Louise) Rosenzweig, both originally from Częstochowa. He grew up in Warsaw and came to the United Kingdom to study at Bradfield College in 1938. He took his undergraduate degree at Balliol College, University of Oxford (1942–4) and completed his doctoral thesis there in 1947.[1] He was Lecturer in Economic History, then Professor at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth from 1947 to 1990. Over the course of his research career, he moved from the study of medieval economics to intellectual history.

Fryde was married to Natalie Davies, his former student, from 1966 to 1981. He was a cousin of the novelist Uri Orlev.

Books[edit]

  • The Wool Accounts of William de la Pole: A Study of Some Aspects of the English Wool Trade at the Start of the Hundred Years (1964)
  • Studies in Medieval Trade and Finance (1983)
  • Humanism and Renaissance Historiography (1983)
  • Peasants and Landlords in Later Medieval England c.1380–c.1525 (1996)
  • The Early Palaeologan Renaissance (1261–c.1360) (2000)

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Edward's III war finance 1337-41 : transactions in wool and credit operations (Fryde, E. B.), Search Oxford Libraries Online, retrieved 12 March 2023

References[edit]

External links[edit]