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James Holt (historian)

Sir James Clarke Holt, also known as J. C. Holt and Jim Holt, was an English medieval historian, known particularly for his work on Magna Carta. He was the third Master of Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, serving between 1981 and 1988.

Career
Educated at Bradford Grammar School, Holt's studies at The Queen's College, Oxford, were interrupted by war service with the British Army, including 14 months in north-west Europe in 1944–1945. Returning to The Queen's College in 1945, he graduated with first-class honours in history in 1947, and subsequently took his DPhil with a thesis titled The "Northern" Barons Under John in 1952, at Merton College, Oxford. Holt held the positions of Lecturer (1949–1962) ==Honours==
Honours
Holt became a Fellow of the British Academy in 1978 and was its Vice President from 1987 to 1989, and was knighted for his work as an historian. ==Publications==
Publications
Magna Carta Holt made his name with the book Magna Carta, which came out in its original edition in 1965. In this work he treated charter in the context of the political framework of its time. The second edition was published in 1992. Holt retained the thematic structure, although he had entertained the thought of revising the work as a clause by clause commentary. New appendices were added for the second edition, and previous ones were expanded. Some parts of the main text underwent limited revision. Holt did not defend his original analysis from critics as much as aggressively restate his views. One of the most noted aspects of Holt's work on Magna Carta has been its attention to events in continental Europe. Several studies undertaken after the publication of the Second Edition have expanded on the turmoil between John and Pope Innocent III, most significantly the Albigensian Crusade. Holt's original analysis noted similarities between the Statute of Pamiers and Magna Carta, but remained cautious and unwilling to claim a direct influence. George Garnett and John Hudson write in the introduction of the Third Edition that "a picture of closer ties between the Crusade and developments in England can be sketched". Baronial leader Robert fitz Walter fled to France in 1212 where he was given the title "Marshal of the Army of God and of the Holy Church in England". Holt originally called the title "imposing", but changed this in the second edition to "vainglorious and seditious". Selected worksThe Northerners: A Study in the Reign of King John (1961) • Magna Carta (1965) • Magna Carta and the Idea of Liberty (1972) • ''What's in a Name? Family Nomenclature and the Norman Conquest''. (The Stenton Lecture 1981). University of Reading, 1982. • Robin Hood, (London, 1982; 2011) • Magna Carta and Medieval Government (1985; 2003: ) • (editor) Foundations for the Future: The University of Cambridge (1995) • Colonial England, 1066–1215 (1997) • Magna Carta (Cambridge, 2015) • マグナカルタ (2000) • King John ==Personal life==
Personal life
Holt married Alice Suley in 1951; they had one son. Holt was "passionate about cricket". ==Death==
Death
Holt died on 9 April 2014, aged 91. ==References==
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