Eric Bertrand Ceadel

Eric Bertrand Ceadel (7 February 1921 – 1 June 1979) was a japanologist and university administrator. He was a University Lecturer in Japanese at the University of Cambridge, a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge from 1962, and Librarian of the Cambridge University Library from 1967 until his death.

War service

From September 1941 he served in the British Army until he was demobilized in 1945 with the rank of Captain. He was on the first of the twelve courses in Japanese which were run at the Bedford Japanese School, part of the Inter-Services Special Intelligence School in Bedford. The teacher was Captain Oswald Tuck. Most of the graduates of each 6-month course were sent to Bletchley Park to work on the decrypted Japanese signals, but Ceadel was retained as a teacher for all the subsequent courses.[1]

Postwar career

After the war Ceadel returned to Cambridge as a research student at Christ's College, where he worked on the historical development of the Japanese literary language. In 1947 he was appointed to the first newly created lectureship in Japanese at Cambridge and in subsequent years he oversaw the development of Japanese studies at Cambridge. He first travelled to Japan in 1950 to buy books for the University Library. During the visit to Britain in 1953 of Crown Prince Akihito, who succeeded his father as emperor of Japan in 1989, he spent 26–28 May in Cambridge, visiting Trinity College, King's College, the University Library and the Fitzwilliam Museum: Ceadel's services during this visit were described as 'indispensable'.[2] Subsequently, he was heavily involved in University administration, serving on the General Board, the Financial Board and the Council of the Senate. In 1967 he was appointed University Librarian.[3]

Publications

  • "The ‘Askew Collations’ of Aeschylus", The Classical Quarterly vol. 34, pt 1-2 (1940), pp. 55 – 60
  • "Resolved Feet in the Trimeters of Euripides and the Chronology of the Plays", The Classical Quarterly vol. 35, pt 1-2 (1941), pp. 66 – 89
  • "The Division of Parts Among the Actors in Sophocles' Oedipus Coloneus", The Classical Quarterly vol. 35, pt 3-4 (1941), pp. 139 – 147
  • "Published works of the late Professor Gustav Haloun" in Asia Major vol. 3 pt. 1 (1953)
  • "The Oi River Poems and Preface" in Asia Major vol. 3 pt. 1 (1953)
  • "Far Eastern Collections in Libraries in Great Britain, France, Holland and Germany" in Asia Major vol. 3 pt 2 (1953)
  • "Japanese Research on Buddhism Since the Meiji Period" (with A. Hirakawa), Monumenta Nipponica vol. 11, pt 3 (1955), pp. 221 – 246, and vol. 11, pt 4 (1956), pp. 397 – 424
  • "Tadamine's Preface to the ōi River Poems" in Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies vol. 18, pt 2 (1956), pp. 331 – 343
  • "The Two Prefaces of the Kokinshuu" in Asia Major vol. 7 (1959)
  • (As editor) Literatures of the East: an appreciation (London: John Murray, 1953)
  • Classified Catalogue of Modern Japanese Books in Cambridge University Library (Cambridge: W. Heffer and Sons Ltd., 1962)

References

  1. Johnson and Brewer 1991, p. xi; Kornicki 2005; Tuck 1945
  2. Bulletin of the Japan Society of London, no. 10 (1953), p. 6. See also the account of the visit in the Cambridge Daily News, 28 May 1953, p. 6.
  3. Johnson and Brewer 1991, pp. xi-xii; Kornicki 2005; Bowring 1998

Sources

  • Richard Bowring, ed., Fifty years of Japanese at Cambridge: a chronicle with reminiscences (Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Cambridge, 1998)
  • Gordon Johnson and Derek Brewer, "Foreword", in Nozomu Hayashi and Peter Kornicki, Early Japanese books in Cambridge University Library (Cambridge University Press, 1991), pp. xi-xiv
  • Peter Kornicki, "Eric Bertrand Ceadel, 1921-79: Japanese studies at Cambridge", in H. Cortazzi, ed., Britain and Japan: Biographical Portraits vol 5 (Folkestone: Global Oriental, 2005), pp. 337–343
  • Oswald Tuck The Bedford Japanese School (typescript completed in 1945 and preserved in the Archives of Churchill College Cambridge)
  • Obituary in The Times (23 Nov. 1979)
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