Kate Tiller
Kate Tiller OBE DL FSA FRHistS (1949–2024)[1] was an academic in the History Faculty at Oxford University, Reader emerita in English local history and a founding Fellow at Kellogg College, University of Oxford.[2]
Her academic fields were British social and local history, with particular research interests in English rural change post-1750, and in religion and community in Britain since 1730. She also wrote on the academic practice of local history, with research interests in local histories of the 20th century and of remembrance and community. She taught on graduate and outreach programmes and to supervise Master's and DPhil students in Chartism and Methodism.[2] Her book English Local History: An Introduction, first published in 1987, has been described as "a standard work" on the subject;[1] the third edition was published in 2020.[3]
She served on the Council of the Chapels Society, a registered charity, and was the academic director and coordinator of the "Communities of Dissent" project run by the Family and Community Historical Research Society (FACHRS) between 2017 and 2020.[3]
Selected publications
[edit]Articles
[edit]- "Charterville and the Chartist Land Company" in Oxoniensia, L (1985), pp. 251–266
- "Religion in 19th-century Britain" in J. Golby (ed), Communities and Families. Cambridge University Press and the Open University, 1994, revised edition 1997) pp. 155–181
- "Rural resistance: Custom, community and conflict in South Oxfordshire, 1800-1914" in O. Ashton et al. (eds), The duty of discontent. Essays for Dorothy Thompson (Mansell, 1995) pp. 97–121
- "Shopkeeping in 17th-century Oxfordshire: William Brock of Dorchester" in Oxoniensia, LXII (1997), pp. 269–286
- "English Local History: the state of the art" (Wolfson Lecture, Cambridge, 1998)
- "Hook Norton, Oxfordshire: An open village" in J Thirsk (ed), The English Rural Landscape. Oxford University Press, 2000.
- "Ways of seeing. Hoskins and the Oxfordshire landscape revisited", in P.S. Barnwell and M. Palmer (eds), Post-medieval Landscapes. Landscape History after Hoskins, Vol. 3 (Windgather Press, 2007), pp. 185–200.
- "Local history at the crossroads", in The Local Historian (Vol. 37 No. 4, November 2007).
- "The desert begins to blossom: Oxfordshire and Primitive Methodism, 1824–1860", in Oxoniensia (Vol. LXXI, 2007), pp. 83–109.
- "Local History and the Twentieth Century: an overview and suggested agenda", in International Journal of Regional and Local Studies, Vol. 6 ( 2011).
- "Local History in England" and "Local History in Ireland" in C. Kammen and A.H. Wilson (eds), Encyclopaedia of Local History (Alta Mira Press, US, 2013 and later editions).
- "Anniversaries, war, and local history", in History News, Winter 2015 (American Association of State and Local History).
- "Patterns of Dissent: The Social and Religious Geography of Nonconformity in Three Counties", International Journal of Regional and Local History, Vol. 13, No. 1 (2018), pp. 4–31.
- "How to read a chapel", The Chapels Society Journal, Vol. 3 (2018), pp. 3–23 (The First Christopher Stell Memorial Lecture).
- "Communities of Dissent 1850–1914: the Heyday of Chapel?", The Chapels Society Journal, Vol. 4 (2023), pp. 3–24.
Books and edited works
[edit]- Blenheim: Landscape for a palace. Alan Sutton, 1987. (2nd edition 1997) (Edited with J. Bond)
- English local history: an introduction. Alan Sutton, 1992. (Revised edition with chapter on 20th century, 2002; 3rd edition published 2020).
- Dorchester Abbey: Church and people 635–2005. 2005. (Editor and contributor, including "Religion and community: Dorchester 1800–1920", pp. 61–83.)
- An historical atlas of Oxfordshire. Oxfordshire Record Society, 2010. (Edited with G. Darkes)
- Religious census returns for Berkshire, Berkshire Record Society, 14 (2010), lx 133pp.
- Remembrance and community: War memorials and local history. British Association for Local History, 2013.
- Parsonages. Shire, 2016.
- Communities of Dissent 1850–1914. The Chapels Society Journal, Vol. 4 (2023) (edited with Chris Skidmore)
References
[edit]- ^ a b "A tribute to Fellow Emerita Dr Kate Tiller OBE, 1949–2024". Kellogg College, Oxford. 4 June 2024. Archived from the original on 6 June 2024. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
- ^ a b "Kate Tiller | Kellogg College". Kellogg College, Oxford. 2018. Archived from the original on 23 December 2018. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
- ^ a b Skidmore, Chris; Tiller, Kate, eds. (May 2023). "Contributors". Communities of Dissent 1850–1914. 4. The Chapels Society: i. ISBN 978-0-9545061-7-9. ISSN 2051-6371.
External links
[edit]- 1949 births
- 2024 deaths
- Academics of the University of Oxford
- British women historians
- Deputy lieutenants of Oxfordshire
- Fellows of the Royal Historical Society
- Fellows of the Society of Antiquaries of London
- Historians of Oxfordshire
- Local historians of England
- Officers of the Order of the British Empire
- British historian stubs