Gareth Alban Davies, was a Welsh poet, educator and Hispanist who was Cowdray Professor of Spanish at the University of Leeds.
Background
Davies was born in Ton Pentre in the Rhondda in 1926. His father was the Rev"d T. Alban Davies, a Congregationalist preacher who practised at Bethesda Church in Ton Pentre. His father was a Welsh speaker and an early member of Plaid Cymru, the Nationalist political party of Wales.
His father was a large influence on Davies" moral viewpoint, and instilled in him a nationalistic and egalitarian ethos.
Career
Davies translated many Spanish texts into English and Welsh, and was a noted expert on the works of Fernando Arrabal and Federico García Lorca. Although the youngest of the group, he contributed to an anthology published by the movement, and used his time with the group to discuss the French and Spanish literature he was studying at Porth Grammar School. At the age of 18, and with Britain still at war, Davies was conscripted as a Bevin Boy, which saw him working as a coal miner rather than serve active military duty.
He continued his studies during this period, relying on discounted books from London"s foremost specialised antiquarian book-seller of Catalan and Castilian language, Joan Gili.
Despite his educated background, and his chaste values of refraining from smoking, drinking and womanising. In sharp contrast to many of his collier work-mates, Davies enjoyed his three years spent as a coal miner.
Believing it brought him closer to the working-class man of the Rhondda. At Oxford he studied Romance Languages and received an Master of Arts and a Doctor of Philosophy, after which he was appointed to an Assistant Lectureship at the University of Leeds.
Davies settled near Otley and he and Caryl had four children: Eleri, Catrin, Gwen and Rhodri.
After his retirement, Davies moved back to Wales, settling in Llangwyryfon in Ceredigion. He died in Aberystwyth in 2009, having survived Caryl who died in 2007. Davies joined the University of Leeds as an Assistant Lecturer in Spanish in 1952.
He was promoted to Lecturer in 1955 and to Senior Lecturer in 1968.
During his time at Leeds he held visiting appointments at the University of Cardiff in Wales, Dartmouth College in the United States and at Australian National University in Canberra. In 1975 he was appointed Cowdray Professor of Spanish and Head of the Department of Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures at Leeds.
He retired in 1986 with the title Emeritus Professor.