Agnata Butler
Agnata Frances Butler (née Ramsay; 1867–1931) was a British classical scholar. She was among the first generation of women to take the Classical Tripos examinations at the University of Cambridge, and was the only person to be placed in the top division of the first class at the end of her third year, in 1887. She married the Master of Trinity College, Henry Montagu Butler, in August 1888, becoming the leading hostess in Cambridge. She published a version of Book VII of Herodotus' Histories in 1891.
Agnata Butler | |
---|---|
Portrait of her as a student at Girton College | |
Born | Agnata Frances Ramsay[1] 28 January 1867 |
Died | 27 May 1931 64) | (aged
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | |
Occupation | First Lady |
Organization | Trinity College, Cambridge |
Known for | first in the Classical Tripos |
Early life and education
She was born Agnata Ramsay in London on 28 January 1867, the daughter of Sir James Henry Ramsay, 10th Baronet of Bamff, and Elizabeth Mary Charlotte née Scott-Kerr. She came from a family with a history of academic achievement as her father published books on history,[4] her uncle George Gilbert Ramsay was a professor of humanity at Glasgow University and her grandfather, Sir George Ramsay, published works on philosophy.[5]
Brought up in Perthshire, she attended St Leonards School in St Andrews.[1] In 1884, she went as the Misses Metcalfes' Scholar[6] to Girton College, Cambridge, where she read Classics.[1] Her achievement in being the only candidate in 1887 to be placed in the top division of the first class in the Classical Tripos examinations[7] – thereby being placed above all of the men in her year – was marked with a cartoon in Punch which was entitled 'Honour to Agnata Frances Ramsay' and showed her boarding a train's first-class compartment marked 'For Ladies Only'.[3][8]
Personal life
While a student, she worked hard at her studies but also found time for outdoor pursuits which she enjoyed, including tennis and skating.[6] She was president of the debating society and, while she did not speak often, she impressed others with her eloquence and humility.[6]
In August 1888, she married the Master of Trinity, Henry Montagu Butler. They had met at the Cambridge Greek Play,[7] a performance of Oedipus Rex in November 1887 for which Butler had arranged a large party of 42.[9] He had included Agnata because of her prowess in the classics but he later wrote that it was her "goodness ... not her Greek and Latin, which have stolen my heart".[9] Even so, he allowed that, on their honeymoon, they "read a great deal of Greek together".[9]
They had three sons, James, Gordon, and Nevile.[1] Their first child was born while she was working on her edition of Herodotus, which prompted Punch to run another punning cartoon, in which she was portrayed as ordering 'a crib for Herodotus'.[10] James became an academic, and was Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge University; Gordon was killed in action in Egypt in 1916; Nevile became a diplomat, serving as British Ambassador to Brazil and to the Netherlands.
After the death of her husband in 1918, she remained in Cambridge, where she was involved in the local Christian Science church.[11] She died in Harrow on 27 May 1931.[1]
Classical scholarship
At Cambridge, she worked on a version of Book VII (Polymnia) of Herodotus' Histories. It was published in the original Ancient Greek with notes in 1891, as part of Macmillan's Classical series for colleges and schools.[12] She may have been the first British woman to produce an edition of a classical author.[13] In 2006, Mary Beard wrote that "Agnata Ramsey was one of the most notorious casualties of the university marriage market", as she "did very little classics ever after".[14]
Her husband, Montagu Butler, was friends with the poet laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson. In 1892 the couple visited Farringford House, where she and Tennyson discussed classical works such as the Alcaics of Horace and Sappho. She recalled his scepticism about the recent discovery of Troy,[15]
Then we spoke of Schliemann, of whom I had just been reading in Schuchhardt's book, and he said he had no faith in him. 'How could a great city have been built on a little ridge like that (meaning Hissarlik)? Where would have been the room for Priam's fifty sons and fifty daughters?'
Another famous classicist was A. E. Housman who wrote in 1911 to thank her after a visit,[16]
Dear Mrs Butler,
I have been solacing my journey home with your son's excellent verses which the Master was good enough to give me. Oxford men, following Dryden, sometimes refer to Cambridge as Thebes. Trinity Lodge, at any rate, seems to me a happy combination of Athens and Sybaris.
I am yours sincerely
A. E. Housman
Prize
A prize for the best classics students in their second or third year was established and awarded by the Butlers – the Agnata Butler Prize.[17] Winners included Caroline Skeel (1893/4), Dorothy Tarrant (1907) and Barbara Wootton (1917).
References
Citations
- Delamont 2004.
- Kamm 2012, p. 96.
- Dash 2011.
- Lodge & Chibnall 2004.
- Budge 2004.
- Stephen 1933, p. 173.
- Beard 2017.
- Muller 2014.
- Delamont 2012, p. 183.
- Delamont 1989, p. 145.
- Gartrell-Mills 1991, p. 116.
- Butler 1891.
- Lateiner, Gold & Perkins 2013, p. 260.
- Beard 2006.
- Pearsall 2008, p. 162.
- Housman 2007, p. 264.
- Tuker 1907.
Sources
- Beard, Mary (18 August 2006), "Lessons in Love", The Independent
- Beard, Mary (25 January 2017), "The struggles of clever women", The Times Literary Supplement
- Budge, Gavin (2004), "Ramsay, Sir George, ninth baronet (1800–1871)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press
- Butler, Agnata F. (1891), Herodotus VII, London: Macmillan; see 1889 reprint online
- Dash, Mike (28 October 2011), The Woman Who Bested the Men at Math, Smithsonian Institution
- Delamont, Sara (1989), Knowledgeable Women: Structuralism and the Reproduction of Elites, London: Routledge, ISBN 9780415015998
- Delamont, Sara (2004), "Butler , Agnata Frances (1867–1931)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/45783
- Delamont, Sara (2012), "The Domestic Ideology and Womens Education", The Nineteenth-century Woman: Her Cultural and Physical World, Routledge, ISBN 9781136248245
- Gartrell-Mills, Claire F. (1991), Christian Science: An American Religion in Britain, 1895–1940, Oxford: Oxford University
- Housman, Alfred Edward (2007), Archie Burnett (ed.), The Letters of A. E. Housman, Clarendon Press, ISBN 9780198184966
- Kamm, Josephine (2012), How Different From Us, Routledge, ISBN 9781136590290
- Lateiner, Donald; Gold, Barbara K.; Perkins, Judith (2013), Roman Literature, Gender and Reception: Domina Illustris, New York and London: Routledge, ISBN 0415825075
- Lodge, Richard; Chibnall, Marjorie (2004), "Ramsay, Sir James Henry, tenth baronet (1832–1925)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press
- Muller, Aislinn (2014), The history of Girton College, archived from the original on 7 December 2017, retrieved 22 March 2017
- Pearsall, Cornelia (2008), Tennyson's Rapture: Transformation in the Victorian Dramatic Monologue, Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780198034285
- Stephen, Barbara (1933), Girton College 1869–1932, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9781108015318
- Tuker, Mildred Anna Rosalie (1907), Cambridge, London: Adam and Charles Black