Sir John Evans (17 November 1823 – 31 May 1908) was an English antiquarian, geologist and founder of prehistoric archaeology.
The John Evans collection, housed at Oxford's Ashmolean Museum, comprises more than 12,000 objects, including a large proportion of British Palaeolithic stone tools.
Biography
John Evans, son of the Rev. A. B. Evans, was born at Britwell Court, Buckinghamshire. At the age of seventeen he started to work for the paper-manufacturing business of John Dickinson & Co. Ltd at Nash Mills (Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire). The company had been founded by his uncle and later father-in-law John Dickinson (1782–1869), who was also its senior partner. In 1850 Evans was admitted as a partner in the company and did not retire from active management until 1885.
Apart from his managerial work John Evans was also a distinguished antiquary, archaeologist and numismatist. He was president of the following societies and institutions:
- The Society of Antiquaries, from 1885 to 1892.
- The Royal Numismatic Society, from 1874 to the time of his death.
- The Geological Society of London, from 1874 to 1876.
- The Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, from 1877 to 1879.
- The British Association for the Advancement of Science, from 1897 to 1898.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1864 and for twenty years (1878–1898) he was treasurer of the Royal Society. In 1881, he was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society.
As President of the Society of Antiquaries he was an ex officio trustee of the British Museum and subsequently he became a permanent trustee. His academic honors included honorary degrees from several universities and he was a corresponding member of the Institut de France. He was created a KCB (Knight of the Order of the Bath) in 1892. His library was left to the Bodleian Library in Oxford. A collection of Iron Age antiquities Evans and Sir John Lubbock excavated at the site of Hallstatt in Austria is now in the British Museum's collection.
He lived at Britwell on Castle Hill in Berkhamsted where he died in 1908.
Works
He was the author of three books, in their day standards in their field:
- The Coins of the Ancient Britons (1864);
- The Ancient Stone Implements, Weapons and Ornaments of Great Britain (1872); and
- The Ancient Bronze Implements, Weapons and Ornaments of Great Britain and Ireland (1881).
He also wrote papers on archaeological and geological subjects, notably the papers on Flint Implements in the Drift communicated in 1860 and 1862 to Archæologia.
