A J P Taylor Popular Books

A J P Taylor Biography & Facts

Alan John Percivale Taylor (25 March 1906 – 7 September 1990) was a British historian who specialised in 19th- and 20th-century European diplomacy. Both a journalist and a broadcaster, he became well known to millions through his television lectures. His combination of academic rigour and popular appeal led the historian Richard Overy to describe him as "the Macaulay of our age". In a 2011 poll by History Today magazine, he was named the fourth most important historian of the previous 60 years. Life Early life Taylor was born in 1906 in Birkdale, Southport, which was then part of Lancashire, only child of cotton merchant Percy Lees Taylor and schoolmistress Constance Sumner Taylor (née Thompson). In 1919 his family returned to Ashton-on-Ribble, Preston, where both his parents' families had lived for several decades. His wealthy parents held left-wing views, which he inherited. Both his parents were pacifists who vocally opposed the First World War, and sent their son to Quaker schools as a way of protesting against the war (his grandmother was from an old Quaker family). These schools included The Downs School at Colwall and Bootham School in York. Geoffrey Barraclough, a contemporary at Bootham School, remembered Taylor as "a most arresting, stimulating, vital personality, violently anti-bourgeois and anti-Christian". In 1924, he went to Oriel College, Oxford, to study modern history. During his time as an undergraduate, he was the first student to hold the position of secretary of the junior common room, between 1925-6. In the 1920s, Taylor's mother, Constance, was a member of the Comintern while one of his uncles was a founder member of the Communist Party of Great Britain. Constance was a suffragette, feminist, and advocate of free love who practised her teachings via a string of extramarital affairs, most notably with Henry Sara, a communist who in many ways became Taylor's surrogate father. Taylor has mentioned in his reminiscences that his mother was domineering, but his father enjoyed exasperating her by following his own ways. Taylor had a close relationship with his father, and enjoyed his father's quirkiness. Taylor himself was recruited into the Communist Party of Great Britain by a friend of the family, the military historian Tom Wintringham, while at Oriel; a member from 1924 to 1926. Taylor broke with the Party over what he considered to be its ineffective stand during the 1926 General Strike. After leaving, he was an ardent supporter of the Labour Party for the rest of his life, remaining a member for over sixty years. Despite his break with the Communist Party, he visited the Soviet Union in 1925, and again in 1934. Academic career Taylor graduated from Oxford in 1927 with a first-class honours degree. After working briefly as a legal clerk, he began his post-graduate work, going to Vienna to study the impact of the Chartist movement on the Revolution of 1848. When this topic turned out not to be feasible, he switched to studying the question of Italian unification over a two-year period. This resulted in his first book, The Italian Problem in European Diplomacy, 1847–49 published in 1934. Manchester years Taylor was a lecturer in history in the University of Manchester from 1930 to 1938. He initially lived with his wife in an unfurnished flat on the top floor of an eighteenth-century house called The Limes, at 148 Wilmslow Road, which was set back from the street, opposite the entrance to Didsbury Park, at the southern end of Didsbury village. A few years later Taylor purchased a house in the village of Disley on the edge of the Peak District. Oxford years He became a Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1938, a post he held until 1976. He was also a lecturer in modern history at the University of Oxford from 1938 to 1963. At Oxford he was such a popular speaker that he had to give his lectures at 8:30 a.m. to avoid the room becoming over-crowded. In 1962, Taylor wrote in a review of The Great Hunger: Ireland 1845–1849 by Cecil Woodham-Smith that: "All Ireland was a Belsen. ... The English governing class ran true to form. They had killed two million Irish people." Taylor added that if the death rate from the Great Famine was not higher it "was not for want of trying" on the part of the British government, quoting Benjamin Jowett, the Master of Balliol College: "I have always felt a certain horror of political economists since I heard one of them say that the Famine in Ireland would not kill more than a million people, and that would scarcely be enough to do much good." Taylor later reprinted his book review under the stark title "Genocide" in his 1976 book Essays in English History." In 1964, whilst he retained his college fellowship, the University of Oxford declined to renew Taylor's appointment as a university lecturer in modern history. This apparently sudden decision came in the aftermath of the controversy around his book The Origins of the Second World War. Moving to London, he became a lecturer at the Institute of Historical Research at University College London and at the Polytechnic of North London. An important step in Taylor's "rehabilitation" was a festschrift organised in his honour by Martin Gilbert in 1965. He was honoured with two more festschriften, in 1976 and 1986. The festschriften were testaments to his popularity with his former students as receiving even a single festschrift is considered to be an extraordinary and rare honour. Second World War During the Second World War, Taylor served in the Home Guard and befriended émigré statesmen from Central Europe, such as the former Hungarian President Count Mihály Károlyi and Czechoslovak President Edvard Beneš. These friendships helped to enhance his understanding of the region. His friendship with Beneš and Károlyi may help explain his sympathetic portrayal of them, in particular Károlyi, whom Taylor portrayed as a saintly figure. Taylor became friends with Hubert Ripka, the press attache for Beneš, who lived in Oxford, and through him, got to know President Beneš who lived in London. Taylor wrote that because Beneš was a President, "he was not allowed to brave the front line in London and had to live in a sovereign state at Aston Abbots – a Rothschild house of, for them, a modest standard. Bored and isolated, Beneš summoned an audience whatever he could and I was often swept over to Aston Abbots in the presidential car". In 1943, Taylor wrote his first pamphlet, Czechoslovakia's Place in a Free Europe, explaining his view that Czechoslovakia would after the war serve as a "bridge" between the Western world and the Soviet Union. Czechoslovakia's Place in a Free Europe began as a lecture Taylor had given at the Czechoslovak Institute in London on 29 April 1943 and at the suggestion of Jan Masaryk was turned into a pamphlet to explain Czechoslovakia's situation to the British people. Taylor argued that the Czechoslovaks would have to "explain" to the Soviets and "explai.... Discover the A J P Taylor popular books. Find the top 100 most popular A J P Taylor books.

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  • What We Did synopsis, comments

    What We Did

    Natalie Chandler

    ONE SMALL SCRATCH AND THE SECRETS WILL COME POURING OUT . . . Jenna has spent the last twentyfive years trying to forget what happened to her as a teenager. Trying to forget what t...

  • J. P. Taylor v. State Ex Rel. Harry Sanders synopsis, comments

    J. P. Taylor v. State Ex Rel. Harry Sanders

    Supreme Court of Florida

    PER CURIAM. This cause having heretofore been submitted to the court upon the transcript of the record of the judgment aforesaid, and argument of counsel for the respective partie...

  • The Drowning Girls synopsis, comments

    The Drowning Girls

    Veronica Lando

    One simple sacrifice is all they need. 'Eerie, atmospheric and addictive, The Drowning Girls shimmers with gothic tension' Candice FoxCast a stone. Aim true. Let her sink.Nate can'...

  • A. J. P. Taylor and his critics in Great Britain synopsis, comments

    A. J. P. Taylor and his critics in Great Britain

    stephanie mihelic

    A.J.P. Taylor’s The Origins of the Second World War and his critics in Great Britain In 1961 A.J.P. Taylor, described as “an enfant terrible among historians” 1 by Ian F. D. Morrow...

  • State Idaho v. Clifford J. Taylor synopsis, comments

    State Idaho v. Clifford J. Taylor

    Supreme Court Of Idaho

    On June 20, 1977, an information was filed in the District Court in Cassia County charging the appellant and two other men with the commission of grand larceny on May 28, 1977. The...

  • Believe Me Not synopsis, comments

    Believe Me Not

    Natalie Chandler

    'This was a FANTASTIC book, I will not forget this one for a loooooooooong time and if ever . . . a MUST READ!' Real Reader ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐'I SWALLOWED THIS BOOK WHOLE. Devoured it. Coul...

  • The Modern Library synopsis, comments

    The Modern Library

    Carmen Callil & Colm Tóibín

    For Colm Toíbín and Carmen Callil there is no difference between literary and commercial writing there is only the good novel: engrossing, inspirational, compelling. In their sele...

  • State Idaho v. Clifford J. Taylor synopsis, comments

    State Idaho v. Clifford J. Taylor

    Supreme Court of Idaho No. 12837

    On June 20, 1977, an information was filed in the District Court in Cassia County charging the appellant and two other men with the commission of grand larceny on May 28, 1977. The...

  • Larson Ford Sales v. J. Taylor Silver synopsis, comments

    Larson Ford Sales v. J. Taylor Silver

    Supreme Court Of Utah

    MAUGHAN, Justice: On appeal is a judgment of the district court dismissing an appeal from the small claims court. We affirm.

  • R. J. Taylor and John Pasco v. Mary P. Finlayson synopsis, comments

    R. J. Taylor and John Pasco v. Mary P. Finlayson

    Supreme Court of Florida

    This appeal is from a decree confirming the sale and granting a deficiency decree in a mortgage foreclosure suit. Seven questions are urged for reversal of the judgment...

  • Stanley G. Cole and Mark J. Taylor v. synopsis, comments

    Stanley G. Cole and Mark J. Taylor v.

    Court of Appeals of Idaho No. 17012

    This case involves application of the doctrine of res judicata in an action brought by two attorneys to collect fees allegedly due them from a former client. The collect...

  • The Perfect Lie synopsis, comments

    The Perfect Lie

    Jo Spain

    'Will keep you guessing and guessing' Cara HunterHe jumped to his death in front of witnesses. Now his wife is charged with murder.Five years ago, Erin Kennedy moved to New York fo...