Marc_Fitch_Lectures

Marc Fitch

Marcus Felix Brudenell Fitch CBE FBA FSA, (5 January 1908 2 April 1994) was an English historian and philanthropist.[1]

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Fitch was born in Kensington, London in 1908, the only child of provision merchant Hugh Bernard Fitch (1873–1962) and his wife Bertha Violet (née James).[1] His family owned the food company Fitch & Son Ltd, later named Fitch Lovell. After finishing his schooling, Fitch joined the family business, and was appointed a director in 1930.[2][3]

During his life he travelled around Europe, with interests in history, antiquities, and archaeology. In 1952 he was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, and was also made a Fellow of the British Academy.[1]

While he was chairman of the British Record Society (1949–67[3]) he set up the Marc Fitch Fund (1956),[4] an educational charity which funds research and publication, primarily in the UK, in the fields of archaeology, historical geography, history of art, and architecture, heraldry and genealogy.

Fitch was awarded an Honorary DLitt. by the University of Leicester; a university building was named after him,[5] housing the Marc Fitch Library, with a large collection of local history and a collection of national geography. The university's Marc Fitch Historical Institute, on Salisbury Road, is a centre for urban historical research named after Fitch.[6]

Between 1975 and 1988, the Marc Fitch Award for Bibliography was funded by Fitch.[7] Since 1956, the Marc Fitch lectures[8] have been given by guest speakers, including David Starkey. During the 1970s, Fitch helped set up the Aurelius Trust, a charity which makes donations in the interests of the conservation of culture.

In 1973 the British School at Athens built a laboratory with Fitch's backing, named after him.[9]

Fitch died in 1994 in Andover, Hampshire.

The Marc Fitch Lectures

The lectures were started by Marc Fitch in 1956, and are funded by the Marc Fitch Fund,[10] an educational charity also set up in 1956.[11][12]

The lectures were held at the Institute of Historical Research until 2012,[10] when the series moved to a tour of the counties with three held a year.

Previous lectures

  • 1 February 2005 – Roy Strong – "Forgotten faces: regional history and regional portraiture"[13]
  • 6 July 2009 – John Morrill – "The British Revolution in the English Provinces, 1640–9" [14][15]
  • 2010 – Steve Hindle – "Below stairs at Arbury Hall: Sir Richard Newdigate and his household staff, c.1670–1710"[16]
  • 2011 – Jeremy Black – "London History"[17]
  • 25 June 2012 – David Starkey – "Head of Our Morality: why the twentieth-century British monarchy matters"[18]
  • 18 May 2013 – Tristram Hunt – "Aristocracy and Industry: the Sutherlands in Staffordshire"[19]
  • 25 October 2013 – Christopher Dyer – "Corby, Northamptonshire and Beyond: The History of Industry in the Countryside"[20]
  • 12 April 2014 – David Hey – "The Origins and Spread of Derbyshire Surnames"[21]
  • 24 October 2014 – Trevor Rowley – "The Making of the Shropshire Landscape"[22]
  • 14 November 2015 – Chris Mullin – "Changing Face of Sunderland"[23]

References

  1. "Fitch, Marcus Felix Brudenell [Marc]". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/101054955. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. http://pasthorizons.wordpress.com/2008/01/24/marc-fitch-fund-for-research-and-publication/. See also Marc Fitch Fund website. The architectural historian John Cornforth was a trustee of the Marc Fitch Fund from 1968 to 2001 and, as successor to Sir Anthony Wagner, its chairman from 1977 to 2001 (see foreword to Murdoch, Tessa [ed.], Noble Households, Cambridge: John Adamson ISBN 978-0-9524322-5-8 OCLC 980938071, p. vii).
  3. ssm4. "Facilities at CUH — University of Leicester". www2.le.ac.uk.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. "June - 2012 - History SPOT". ihrprojects.wordpress.com.
  5. "BSA". www.bsa.ac.uk.
  6. "Marc Fitch Fund". Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  7. Strong, Roy (2005). "Forgotten faces: regional history and regional portraiture – Historical Research – Institute of Historical Research Volume 78 Issue 1999". Historical Research. 78 (199): 43–57. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2281.2005.00238.x.
  8. Braddick, Michael J. (5 March 2015). The Oxford Handbook of the English Revolution edited by Michael J. Braddick. ISBN 9780191667268. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  9. Black, Jeremy (13 October 2015). Metropolis: Mapping the City By Jeremy Black. ISBN 9781844862207. Retrieved 16 May 2017.

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