Page was born in
Sheffield in 1924, and was educated at
King Edward VII School. His family circumstances required him to leave school at the age of 16. In 1942 he took a course in mechanical engineering at Rotherham Technical College, applying thereafter for a commission in the Royal Navy. After the war, on discharge from the Navy, he was able as an ex-serviceman to obtain a place as an undergraduate at the
University of Sheffield. After graduating in English, he spent a year in Copenhagen working on an MA. He then moved to the University of Nottingham, where he was appointed to an
assistant lectureship in English in 1951 and completed his doctoral dissertation on
The Inscriptions of the Anglo-Saxon Rune-Stones in 1959. In 1962, Page joined the faculty at the
University of Cambridge, where he was a lecturer, and later reader, in
Old Norse language and literature. In 1989-1990 he held the
Sandars Readership in Bibliography lecturing on "Matthew Parker, Archbishop of Canterbury, and his books." He continued to work at Corpus Christi after his retirement in an out-of-the-way office which he called 'Paradise' because it was so hard to reach. ==Academic reputation==