Thomas Stephens was one of the most significant and controversial
nineteenth-century Welsh scholars. His Literature of the Kymry (1849)
was the first work to apply modern critical scholarship to medieval
Welsh literature. Throughout his career, he was an outspoken critic of
unscrupulous interpretations of the Welsh and Celtic past. His scholarly
ability brought him into correspondence with notable writers from not
only Wales, but across the world. Indeed, writing the year after his
death, B. T. Williams noted that the publication of his correspondence
'would be welcomed by all Celtic scholars', as it includes comments by
many of the most noted historians, literary critics and Celticists of
his day on a wide range of subjects. More than this, however, Stephens's
correspondence shows the complex networks of knowledge exchange which
stretched across the nineteenth-century scholarly world and, within
those networks, the development of modern Welsh and Celtic studies.