Edward Courtney was born on 22 March 1932 in Belfast. His parents were George Courtney, who worked as a legal administrator, and his wife Kathleen. From 1946, he was educated at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution, where, encouraged by his teachers H. C. Fay and John Cowser, he began to develop an interest in Latin literature. In 1950, he began studying Classics as a scholar at Trinity College Dublin. He graduated in 1954 and was awarded the Gold Medal in Classics for his results.[1]
Courtney specialised in the textual criticism of Latin poetry.[2] He published critical editions of Valerius Flaccus, Juvenal, Statius, Petronius, and of poetry surviving only in fragments (The Fragmentary Latin Poets).[1] Of the latter, the Latinist Michael Reeve wrote that he knew of no other contemporary scholar "who could have tackled with such erudition an independence of judgement" the topic of fragmentary poetry.[3]