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Mavis Batey (1921–2013)

Auteur de Alice's Adventures in Oxford

15+ oeuvres 263 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Mavis Batey was born Mavis Lever, in Dulwich, south London, England on May 5, 1921. She was reading German at University College London when World War II started. During the war, she was one of the leading codebreakers, breaking the Enigma ciphers that led to the Royal Navy's victory over Italy at afficher plus Matapan in 1941 and to the success of the D-day landings in 1944. In the 1960s, her husband was appointed the chief financial officer of Oxford University and they lived on the university's Nuneham Park estate where the gardens, landscaped in the 18th century, had become overgrown. While researching the estate, she developed an interest in historical gardens. She wrote numerous books on historical gardens including Jane Austen and the English Landscape and Alexander Pope: Poetry and Landscape, and a biography of Dilly Knox entitled Dilly: The Man who Broke Enigmas. She was awarded the Veitch Memorial Medal of the Royal Horticultural Society in 1985 and was appointed MBE for services to the preservation and conservation of historic gardens in 1987. She died on November 12, 2013 at the age of 92. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Mavis Batey

Oeuvres associées

The Turing Guide (2017) — Contributeur, quelques éditions26 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Batey, Mavis
Autres noms
Lever, Mavis Lilian (birth name)
Date de naissance
1921-05-05
Date de décès
2013-11-12
Sexe
female
Nationalité
England
UK
Lieu de naissance
Dulwich, London, England, UK
Lieu du décès
Chichester, Sussex, England, UK
Lieux de résidence
London, England, UK
Études
University College London
convent school
Professions
codebreaker
local historian
garden historian
gardener
gardening writer
Prix et distinctions
Order of the British Empire (Member, 1987)
Royal Horticultural Society (Veitch Memorial Medal, 1985)
Courte biographie
Besides writing on Oxford, gardens, and Lewis Carroll's Alice, during WWII Mavis Batey was one of the top female code breakers working to crack the "Enigma" code for the Allies. She was born Mavis Lilian Lever in Dulwich, England, to a seamstress mother and postal worker father. She was brought up in Norbury and attended a convent school for girls in Croydon. She was 19 years old and studying German at University College, London at the outbreak of World War II when she decided
she had to "do something better for the war effort." She originally applied to become a nurse, but discovered that her linguistic skills were in high demand.

She was employed by the Government Code & Cypher School briefly at at first to check the personal columns of The Times of London for coded spy messages. Then she was selected to work as a code breaker at Bletchley Park. She served in a research unit reporting to Alfred Dillwyn "Dilly" Knox, chief cryptographer, who was working on the analysis of the Enigma ciphers. By March 1941, she had her first big success, breaking into the Italian Naval Enigma machine. She and her colleagues worked for three days and nights and discovered that the Italians were intending to assault a Royal Navy convoy transporting supplies from Cairo, Egypt to Greece. The information enabled Allied forces to destroy much of the Italian naval force off Cape Matapan, on the coast of Greece.

In December 1941, Mavis broke a message between Belgrade and Berlin that enabled the team to work out the wiring of the Abwehr Enigma machine previously thought to be unbreakable. This allowed the British to read German secret service messages and confirm that Germany believed the false intelligence they were being fed by British spies that the D-Day Allied invasion would take place on the Pas de Calais rather than in Normandy. While at Bletchley Park, Mavis met Keith Batey, a mathematician and fellow code breaker whom she married in 1942. After the war, she spent some time in the Diplomatic Service, and then raised her three children. She wrote a 2009 biography of her boss called Dilly: The Man Who Broke Enigmas. She also published a number of books on garden history such as Jane Austen and the English Landscape (1996) and Alexander Pope: Poetry and Landscape (1999). She served as President of the Garden History Society, of which she became Secretary in 1971. She was awarded the Veitch Memorial Medal in 1985, and was named a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1987.

Membres

Critiques

Curious little book. Only 100 pages or so, I read it easily in a couple of evenings. On one hand a fairly dry account of Lewis Carroll's environment and the entries of his diary when he met up with Alice Liddell - it becomes clear that the strange tales in the Alice stories mirror the fairly strange lives of a very well-connected family in Victorian Oxford.
On the other hand it highlights Lewis Carroll's fanciful mind, and his love of spinning wonder from everyday life, and sharing it. On this level, it's a fascinating book and almost made 4 stars.

Favourite things learnt were that Alice's birthday was 4th May, and that Carroll taught symbolic logic to women and girls as he thought it "would train them to think independently and analytically to safeguard them from false statements made by politicians and what we now call the media."

Lovely book to read if you're a big fan of the stories.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
6loss | 1 autre critique | Nov 7, 2019 |
Very good, and more enjoyable than the Book on Flemings Secret War which I also read. Very concise, yet detailed. Enjoyable & easy to read without making it all inaccesible. recommended for those with an interest.
 
Signalé
aadyer | Jul 10, 2011 |
http://nhw.livejournal.com/154401.html

It's rather good, especially given the length (less than 100 pages), illustrating bits of the back-story to Dodgson's writing and relationship with Alice. Batey has done a lot of (or at least has fluently recounted other people's) historical research, tying specific events in real-life Oxford of 1859-63 with specific events in the books. Very neat; I just wish there had been proper footnotes so that I knew which bits were her own research and which from other people, and ideas for what else I might read on the subject.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
nwhyte | 1 autre critique | May 11, 2006 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
15
Aussi par
1
Membres
263
Popularité
#87,567
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
3
ISBN
23

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