Abstract

If honours and titles give measure of a man, then Professor Sir Grahame Clark was indeed important. Faculty Assistant Lecturer in the Faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology at Cambridge University from 1935-46, University Lecturer 1946-52, Disney Professor of Archaeology 1952-74, Head of the Department of Archaeol­ogy and Anthropology 1956-61 and 1968-71, Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge 1950-73, Master of Peterhouse 1973-80, he was a visiting lecturer at diverse universities; appointed CBE in 1971, he received many awards includ­ing the prestigious Erasmus Prize for 1990, presented by Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, for his "long and inspiring devotion to prehistory" (Scarre 1991:10); and in June 1992, he was knighted.<br /><br />Yet well before fame and position were rewards, Clark made major contributions to the establishment of prehis­tory as an academic subject at Cambridge University. Cambridge was the first and, for many years, only British university granting an undergraduate degree which offered prehistory as a specialization. "The development of postgraduate research in prehistoric archaeology at Cambridge had to wait on the provision of undergraduate teaching;' Clark (1989b: 6) recently observed. The "faculty was the only one in Britain producing a flow of graduates in prehistoric archaeology" (Clark 1989a: 53).

Highlights

  • If honours and titles give measure of a man, Professor Sir Grahame Clark was important

  • "The development of postgraduate research in prehistoric archaeology at Cambridge had to wait on the provision of undergraduate teaching;' Clark (1989b: 6) recently observed

  • The "faculty was the only one in Britain producing a flow of graduates in prehistoric archaeology" (Clark 1989a: 53)

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Summary

Introduction

If honours and titles give measure of a man, Professor Sir Grahame Clark was important. Cyril Fox, one of prehistory's first students, earned the University'S newly instituted Ph.D. degree in 1922 for his surface geological and geographical study of the Archaeology of the Cambridge Region. Clark chose to became one of the very few research students in the Faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology.

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