Robert Thomas JenkinsCBE (31 August 1881 – 11 November 1969) was a Welsh historian and academic.
Jenkins was born on 31 August 1881 inLiverpool. He moved with his family toBangor, Gwynedd, when his father was appointed clerk to the registrar of the newly establishedUniversity College of North Wales. However, both of his parents had died by 1888 and he was then brought up by his maternal grandparents inBala, Gwynedd. He was baptised byThomas Charles Edwards and studied atBala Grammar School before winning ascholarship to theUniversity College of Wales, Aberystwyth, obtaining a first-class degree in English in 1901. He then studied history and English atTrinity College, Cambridge before teaching inLlandysul (1904), inBrecon (1904 to 1917) and at theCity of Cardiff High School for Boys (1917 to 1930). Whilst he was a teacher, his interest in history deepened and he began to start writing articles on historical topics.
In 1928, he published a history of Wales in the 18th century, with further books following in 1930, the year that he was appointed a lecturer at the University of Wales Bangor. He was assistant editor, then joint editor, ofY Bywgraffiadur Cymreig and its English-language counterpart,The Dictionary of Welsh Biography, writing over 600 entries. He was appointed to a professorship at Bangor in 1945 and retired from the university in 1948, although he continued to work.
He co-wrote a history of theHonourable Society of Cymmrodorion in 1951, the year of its 200th anniversary.[1] He was awarded theCBE in 1956. He died on 11 November 1969.[2]