Thomas Percy (born April 13, 1729, Bridgnorth, Shropshire, Eng.—died Sept. 30, 1811, Dromore, County Down, Ire.) was an English antiquarian and bishop whose collection of ballads, Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (1765), awakened widespread interest in English and Scottish traditional songs.
The basis of Percy’s collection was a tattered 15th-century manuscript of ballads (known as the Percy folio) found in the house of a friend when it was about to be used to light a fire. To this nucleus Percy added many other ballads, songs, and romances, supplied by his friends who, at his request, rummaged in libraries, attics, and warehouses for old manuscripts. Publication of the Reliques inaugurated the “ballad revival,” a flood of collections of ancient songs, that proved a source of inspiration to the Romantic poets.
Percy was the son of a wholesale grocer from Shropshire. After attending local schools he was educated at Christ Church, Oxford, and held livings in Northamptonshire, at Easton Maudit (1753) and Wilby (1756). The Reliques, dedicated to the Countess of Northumberland, gained him her patronage, and after editing The Household Book of the Earl of Northumberland in 1512 (1768), a pioneer work of its kind, he became the earl’s chaplain and secretary. In 1778 he acquired the deanery of Carlisle and in 1782 the Irish bishopric of Dromore. Percy’s geniality and scholarly interests made him many friends, including Samuel Johnson, who encouraged him to edit the Reliques and praised his “minute accuracy of enquiry.” Percy’s translations from Chinese, Hebrew, Spanish, and Icelandic and his first English version of the Icelandic Edda (from Latin, in Northern Antiquities, 1770) show his linguistic ability. Above all, his voluminous correspondence confirms his determined pursuit of factual accuracy and places in context the work for which he is principally remembered.