Biography
Page was born in Sheffield in 1924, and was educated at King Edward VII School."Professor Raymond Page"Academic reputation
Rudolf Simek said that Page "is widely acknowledged as ''the'' authority on Old English runes". Professor Elmer Antonsen of the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign has noted that "serious study of English runes without Raymond Ian Page... is simply inconceivable"; others praise him as a "meticulous scholar". Page's ''An Introduction to English Runes'' was first published in 1973, and revised and republished in 1999. Page intended it as a prefatory publication to a complete corpus edition of Anglo-Saxon runes, and it was praised for, among other qualities, its "healthy skepticism". Even in 2003, it remained "the only book-length study providing a comprehensive and scholarly guide to the Anglo-Saxon use of runes", and the revised edition was deemed as authoritative as the first one was in the 1970s. Much of his work was aimed at a general readership, but many of his scholarly articles were collected in 1995 in ''Runes and Runic Inscriptions: Collected Essays on Anglo-Saxon and Viking Runes.'' Page called himself a 'sceptical' runologist, demonstrating that runes were most often used for mundane purposes and arguing against their 'romantic' association with the occult. In 1996 he was awarded an honorary doctorate at The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).Personal life
In 1953 Page married Elin Hustad; they had two daughters and a son. True to his Yorkshire roots, he would not permit red roses in his garden. Known as a connoisseur of real ale and single-malt whisky, he was presented on his 70th birthday with an oak manuscript conservation box specially made to contain a bottle of whisky, with its spine embossed with the title ''The Runes of Jura''.Works
* 1960. ''Gibbons saga''. Copenhagen: Editiones Arnamagnænæ, Series B, vol 2. * 1970. ''Life in Anglo-Saxon England''. London: Batsford. * 1973. ''An Introduction to English Runes''. London: Methuen. 2nd ed. Boydell Press, 1999 (2006). . * 1985. ''Anglo-Saxon Aptitudes''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. . * 1987. ''"A Most Vile People": Early English Historians on the Vikings''. London: Viking Society for Northern Research. * 1987. ''Runes''. (''Reading the past'' series). London: British Museum Press. . * 1990. ''Norse Myths''. London: British Museum Press. . * 1995.References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Page, R. I. Elrington and Bosworth Professors of Anglo-Saxon English historians English librarians Fellows of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge Old Norse studies scholars People educated at King Edward VII School, Sheffield Royal Navy officers of World War II Runologists 1924 births 2012 deaths Alumni of the University of Sheffield Academics of the University of Nottingham Corresponding Fellows of the Medieval Academy of America Writers on Germanic paganism