Kentish Express Ashford & District

Greek grave mystery is solved

- By Charlie Harman charman@thekmgroup.co.uk

The mystery behind a Greek grave inscriptio­n has been solved.

A story in the Kentish Express earlier this month highlighte­d the grave of Cecil Headlam, who died in 1934, after volunteers clearing St Margaret’s Church in Hothfield uncovered the polymath’s final resting place.

The discovery caused a stir amongst Ancient Greek academics, prompting a number of possible translatio­ns.

But members of the University of Oxford - Dr Llewelyn Morgan of Brasenose College and Professor Armand D’Angour from Jesus College - did a deep dive into the life of Mr Headlam, coming up with a context which aided translatio­n.

The pair’s translatio­n reads: “Love bound this lovely union together all its days, he loved his wife as much as May his love in turn repays.”

Their translatio­n rests on the fact that Mr Headlam’s wife’s name was Mary May Headlam and, having identified errors in the engraving, the pair’s answer to the mystery became clearer.

Dr Morgan said: “In my kind of circles on social media - academic classicist­s - it caused a bit of interest as to who could solve the puzzle.

“For me, it didn’t take long to get the general gist of the thing once I’d appreciate­d there were spelling mistakes.

“I then contacted a colleague, Armand, and between us we reached more conclusion­s about it, ultimately how to translate it.

“In the meantime, on a hunch that Cecil’s wife was called May and then a further hunch she was a divorcee, I’d started to discover some of the backstory.”

Dr Morgan says the pair are still “not entirely happy” with their translatio­n, adding: “The misspellin­gs are hard to explain if the author knew Greek, and in the Greek the sense of the last clause is hard to pin down.

“Overall it’s a slightly amateur piece of work, maybe by someone whose Greek was not quite up to scratch.

“But writing in Greek metre isn’t easy, and this is a sound elegiac couplet, which is no mean feat. It’s all a little intriguing.”

 ??  ?? The Greek text which was discovered on a headstone in St Margaret’s Church during a clean-up by the Hothfield History Society
The Greek text which was discovered on a headstone in St Margaret’s Church during a clean-up by the Hothfield History Society
 ?? Picture: Magdalen College Archives ?? Cecil Headlam played cricket for Oxford at the turn of the 20th century
Picture: Magdalen College Archives Cecil Headlam played cricket for Oxford at the turn of the 20th century

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