Walter Leaf was born on 26 November 1852. In 1865, he won a scholarship to
Winchester College. However, his parents became concerned that living conditions at Winchester would be unacceptable, so they rented a house at
Harrow on the edge of London, where their son enrolled in April 1866 at
Harrow School as a day pupil. From Harrow, he progressed to
Trinity College, Cambridge. He won a scholarship to Trinity in 1870, became a senior classic in 1874, and was elected to a fellowship the following year. He was concerned with uncovering the physical reality of the classical world, in contrast to the
Cambridge Ritualists, and was the foremost
Homer scholar of his generation. His edition of the
Iliad was published in two volumes (1886–1888) and was regarded for several decades as the best English edition of Homer's epic poem. Leaf also translated works from Russian and Persian, and was fluent in several European languages, including French, Italian, and German. He was president of the
Hellenic Society and the
Classical Association. He also took an interest in ancient
geography. ==Banking==