William Richard Morfill, the second child and first son of a professional musician called William Morfill from
Maidstone, Kent, was born on 17 November 1834. After studying at
Maidstone Grammar School and
Tonbridge School, he
matriculated at the
University of Oxford as a member of
Corpus Christi College, on 28 May 1853. He moved to
Oriel College with a scholarship in classics later in 1853. He obtained his BA degree in 1857, although this was only a pass degree as he had fallen seriously ill during the examinations. He remained in
Oxford after graduation, giving private tuition. Between 1865 and 1869, he lectured in philosophy and modern history at one of the
private halls attached to the university,
Charsley's Hall. Morfill had had an interest in foreign languages since school days, encouraged by a Tonbridge teacher who gave him a Russian grammar. He first visited Russia in 1870 and
Prague in 1871, learning languages as he travelled; a visit to
Georgia in 1888 led to an article on Georgian literature. His interest in
Slavonic languages was rewarded with his appointment in 1870 by Oxford to provide the first lectures of the Ilchester Foundation, endowed to encourage studies in this area. He gave further lectures in this series in 1873 and 1883, leading to his 1883 publication
Dawn of European Literature: Slavonic Literature. By this stage, his wife had died (in 1881; there were no children) and he took comfort in his work. He was appointed
Reader in Russian and the other Slavonic languages in 1889 and Professor in 1900. Russian was not a degree subject at Oxford until 1904: it has been said that Oxford's "approval of the languages he had cultivated while they lay outside the curriculum is Morfill's most enduring achievement." He also became Curator of the
Taylor Institution and was appointed a
Fellow of the British Academy in 1903. He died on 9 November 1909 and was buried in the same grave as his wife. In 2009, the
Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board marked 42
Park Town, where Morfill lived from 1863 to 1899, with a plaque to commemorate him. The Board's secretary said that the house had been like a "cultural embassy", where people came to learn languages, and that Morfill had been chosen for being a "great pioneer" who had spent his life establishing Russian and Slavonic languages in Oxford. ==Works==