Denys Page
Coming from a middle-class family in Reading, Page studied classics at Christ Church, Oxford, and served the college as a lecturer for most of the 1930s. He spent the Second World War working on Ultra intelligence material at the Government Code and Cypher School based at Bletchley Park. In 1950, he was elected Regius Chair of Greek at Cambridge which he held until his retirement in 1973. Initially a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, Page was appointed master of the university's Jesus College in 1959. He died of lung cancer in 1978.
Having published an edition of the poets Sappho and Alcaeus with fellow Oxford classicist Edgar Lobel, Page went on to write what became for some time the standard edition of the remaining Greek lyric poets, ''Poetae Melici Graeci'' (''PMG'', 1962). His other notable publications include commentaries on Euripides' ''Medea'' (1938) and Aeschylus' ''Agamemnon'' (1957). In 1971, he was knighted for his services to classical scholarship. Provided by Wikipedia