Daniel Huws

Daniel Huws is the world's leading authority of the last hundred years on Welsh manuscripts, with contributions that are held to represent a significant advance on those of John Gwenogvryn Evans.[1]

He is noted in particular for his studies of individual manuscripts, and these, alongside portraits of significant Renaissance collectors, made up his work Medieval Welsh Manuscripts, now recognised as the key academic text of this dimension of Wales' written history and culture.[2] As of 2015, his work focuses on the history of Welsh manuscripts continuing up to 1800.

His work has also included other projects on Wales, including The Poets of the Princes, The Poets of the Gentry, Prose Texts from Manuscripts, and The Poems of Dafydd ap Gwilym. He has also written on Welsh music, as well as publishing three volumes of poetry with Secker and Warburg and Faber and Faber. A university friend and associate of Ted Hughes, he has written a memoir of the poet.

He was awarded the Derek Allen Prize by the British Academy in 2006.[3]

Life

Huws was raised in London and Anglesey, and attended a school in Llangefni before later graduating from Cambridge University. He worked at the National Library of Wales between 1961 and 1992, and is also a member of the Welsh Academy.[4] As a student, Huws became a close friend of Ted Hughes, and his 2010 Memories of Ted Hughes 1952-1963 chronicles his experiences of the poet at an early age, his circle at Cambridge, the development of his relationship with Sylvia Plath, and their later life in London.

Academic works

  • "Medieval Welsh Manuscripts', Cardiff and Aberystwyth " : University of Wales Press, 2000.
  • "Five Ancient Books of Wales" , H.M. Chadwick Memorial Lectures 6, Cambridge : Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge, 1995.
  • "Cardiff MSS - Summary Catalogue of the Manuscripts" Aberystwyth, National Library of Wales, 1994.
  • "From song to script in medieval Wales" , 2008.
  • "Llyfr Aneirin: a facsimile" , National Library of Wales, 1989.
  • "Peniarth 28: darluniau o Lyfr Cyfraith Hywel Dda / Illustrations from a Welsh lawbook" , Aberystwyth:National Library of Wales, 1988.
  • "From Song to Script in Medieval Wales" , Quaestio Insularis 9, 2008.
  • "Llyff Gwyn Rhydderch" , Cambridge Medieval Celtic Studies 21, 1991.
  • "The Neath Abbey Breviate of Domesday" , in: Griffiths, Ralph A., and Phillipp R. Schofield (eds.), Wales and the Welsh in the Middle Ages: essays presented to J. Beverley Smith, Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2011
  • “Descriptions of the Welsh nanuscripts” , in: Charles-Edwards, T. M., Morfydd E. Owen, and Paul Russell (eds.), The Welsh king and his court, Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2000
  • "The texts: ii. The manuscripts” , in: Charles-Edwards, T. M., Morfydd E. Owen, and D. B. Walters (eds.), Lawyers and laymen. Studies in the history of law, Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1986
  • "Edrica Huws Patchworks / Clytweithiau Edrica Huws" (co-editor) (Manaman, 2007)

Poetry

  • "Noth" , Secker, 1972.
  • "The Quarry" ,Faber, 1999.

Memoirs

  • "Memories of Ted Hughes, 1952-63 ", Five Leaves, 2010.

References

  1. "Derek Allen Prize 2006 awarded to Daniel Huws". British Academy\date=2006. Retrieved 19 Oct 2015.
  2. "Daniel Huws profile - Derek Allen Prize". British academy. 2006. Retrieved 18 Oct 2015.
  3. "Derek Allen Prize 2006, Daniel Huws the winner". British academy. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  4. "Writers of Wales - Daniel Huws". Literature of Wales. 2010. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
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