[Home] About Janus Participating Institutions Browse and Search What's New Feedback Useful Links Research Tools
St John's Library contains:
<-- See earlier
Engledow Papers of Sir Frank Leonard Engledow
Evans Papers of George Clifford Evans
Glover Papers of Terrot Reavely Glover
Goody Papers of Sir Jack Goody
Guest Papers of George Guest
Harman Papers of Nathaniel Bishop Harman
Harper Papers of Charles Hugh Richardson Harper
Heitland Papers of William Emerton Heitland
Herschel Papers of Sir John Herschel
Hiller The personal effects of Alan Menzies Hiller
How Papers of John Charles Halland How
See later -->
Search Janus
Advanced search
Browse catalogues or indexes

More information

Please feel free to contact the repository.

Papers of George Gordon Coulton

Title Papers of George Gordon Coulton
Reference GBR/0275/Coulton
Creator George Gordon Coulton (1858-1947)
Covering Dates 1880–1948 (Circa)
Extent and Medium 4 boxes; paper
Repository St John's College Library
Content and context

Historian. Coulton was born in King's Lynn in 1858 and attended Lynn Grammar School and then Felsted. In 1877 he won a scholarship to St Catharine's College, Cambridge, but a severe case of blood poisoning meant he was awarded an aegrotat degree. After leaving Cambridge, Coulton was briefly a master at a school in Malvern before being ordained deacon in 1883. By 1885 his beliefs led him to forsake his entry into the priesthood and he instead turned to teaching, holding a number of posts in various public schools. In 1896 his employment at a coaching establishment in Eastbourne allowed him time to develop his medieval studies, and he became an expert on the primary sources of the period. From 1900 Coulton began to publish works on the medieval period, probably the most important being two anthologies of medieval sources, 'A Medieval Garner' (1910) and 'Social Britain from the Conquest to the Reformation' (1918). In 1911 Coulton returned to Cambridge to become Birkbeck Lecturer in Ecclesiastical History at Trinity College, and in 1919 he was elected to a lectureship in the English faculty and to a Fellowship at St John's College. He now had the means to concentrate on his scholarship and subsequently published a number of important works, among them 'The Medieval Village' (1925), 'Art and the Reformation' (1928), 'Inquisition and Liberty' (1938), 'Medieval Panorama' (1938), and 'Five Centuries of Religion', published in four volumes between 1923 and 1950, the last appearing posthumously. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1929.

Coulton was something of a controversialist and much of his work was directed at Roman Catholic historians, whom he accused of having a flagrant disregard for historical accuracy. For Coulton historical truth, which he placed in contemporary sources, accurately cited, was the cornerstone of historical study. Something of a modernist, he considered it his duty as an historian to confront those who proffered what he believed to be a less than accurate view of the past. Coulton, though, is remembered for more than this confrontational reputation. His extensive scholarship, which extended much further than many historical works at the turn of the century, is rightly seen as important. He also contributed to a widening of the range of medieval studies by his attention to social and economic issues. Furthermore, Coulton was keen to extend his learning to a much wider audience than just those in academic circles, being a fine public speaker and a clear and lucid writer.

In 1904 Coulton married Rose Dorothy Ilbert, and together they had two daughters. Coulton died in 1947.

Sketchbooks, drawings, etchings, watercolours, a few photographs, letters, and miscellaneous items.

The collection comprises material given by Coulton himself (March 1945), by Mrs Coulton (1953), and by Coulton's daughter, Bridget Bunn (1991).

Access and Use

Please cite as St John's College Library, Papers of George Gordon Coulton

Index Terms
Coulton, George Gordon (1858-1947) historian and controversialist
St John's Library/Coulton contains:
A Sketchbooks, drawings, etchings, and watercolours.
206 items; paper.
1880–1948
B Photographs.
6 items; photograph.
1900–1940
C Correspondence.
689 items; paper.
1891–1937
D Miscellaneous items.
8 items; paper.
1886–1910

This site uses Google Analytics Cookies. By using our website you agree that we can place these cookies on your device.

The webmaster.

Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!