G. M. Trevelyan (1876–1962)
Author of English Social History
About the Author
Series
Works by G. M. Trevelyan
Illustrated English Social History Volume 1: Chaucer's England and the Early Tudors (1949) 136 copies, 1 review
Illustrated English Social History Volume 2: The Age of Shakespeare and the Stuart period (1964) 120 copies
English Social History - Vols. 1 & 2 5 copies
G. M. TREVELYAN: Garibaldi 5 copies
English Social History - Vols. 3 & 4 4 copies
Englannin historia. Toinen osa 4 copies
Storia d'Inghilterra Trevelyan 2 copies
History of England 2 copies
Ramillies 1 copy
FIFTY YEARS 1 copy
The present position of history, an inaugural lecture delivered at Cambridge, October 26, 1927 1 copy
Storia della società inglese 1 copy
Istoria Angliei 1 copy
HISTORY OF ENGLANG 1 copy
Clio 1 copy
Biography : a reader's guide 1 copy
Englishmen and Italians: Some Aspects of Their Relations Past and Present (Classic Reprint) (2015) 1 copy
History of England, Volume 1 1 copy
Storia d'Inghilterra 1 1 copy
Historia Anglii 1 copy
Historia społeczna Anglii 1 copy
Storia d'Inghilterra. Vol.2. 1 copy
Associated Works
Selected Poetical Works of George Meredith. Compiled with some notes by G. M. Trevelyan. (1955) — Editor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Trevelyan, G. M.
- Legal name
- Trevelyan, George Macaulay
- Birthdate
- 1876-01-16
- Date of death
- 1962-07-21
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Cambridge (Trinity College|BA|1896|MA|1900)
Harrow School, London, England, UK - Occupations
- professor
writer
historian
Chairman of the Estates Committee of the National Trust - Organizations
- University of Cambridge
Cambridge Apostles
Durham University (Chancellor)
The National Trust
British Red Cross
Youth Hostels Association (President) - Awards and honors
- Royal Society of Literature (Companion of Literature, 1961)
Order of the British Empire (Commander, 1920)
Order of Merit (1930)
Royal Society (Fellow, 1950)
British Academy (Fellow, 1925)
American Academy of Arts and Letters (1937) (show all 9)
Silver Medal of Military Valor (1915)
American Philosophical Society (International Member, 1949)
American Academy of Arts and Sciences (International Honorary Member, 1931) - Relationships
- Macauley, Thomas Babington (great-uncle)
Trevelyan, George Otto (father)
Trevelyan, R. C. (brother)
Trevelyan, Julian (nephew)
Plumb, J. H. (student) - Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Welcombe, Stratford-on-Avon, England, UK
- Places of residence
- Wallington Hall, Northumberland, England, UK
- Place of death
- Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
- Burial location
- Holy Trinity Church, Langdale, Cumbria, England, UK
- Map Location
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
“It is pleasant to turn from dreary annals of political contest to a thing more vital, the rise among the English of an indigenous Protestantism”
This is the first sentence from Chapter VIII of Trevelyan’s history/text book and it does a pretty good job of explaining the major theme of his book. It was originally published in 1899 and reprinted in several new editions since then, however the text has hardly been updated since its first Victorian publishing date. In a preface to the 1909 show more edition Trevelyan says that he has abandoned study of this period and so only feels competent to remove one or two positive errors. This is therefore a Victorian author’s history with the predilections of that era; a textbook written for English students. On page three his use of Our instead of England seems rather quaint today:
“Our importance in the Councils of Europe, the prosperity of our commerce and our military hold over France”
Trevelyan tackles the period from 1368 to 1395: a period when England was is decline for want of good leadership and reform of it’s institutions. Edward III was in his dotage and English military might was losing ground in France and at sea. Edward lingered on coming more and more under the influence of a self serving clique of courtiers and his mistress and witnessed the death of his son The Black Prince. He was eventually succeeded by Richard II a minor of 14 years (the son of the Black Prince), which resulted in the most powerful men of the realm jockeying for position around the guardians of the young king. Richard II proved not to be the strong leader that England needed and a worsening political and social climate led to the Peasants Uprising of 1381. This was eventually crushed, but lessons were not learned and England‘s political and social life continued to decline.
Trevelyan writes well and his narrative story flows on very effectively. He is good on describing the political situation particularly the relationship between the fledgling Commons, the Lords and the King and his court. The intrigues of the powerful nobles and the declining military situation are all woven into the narrative to give a fairly accurate account of the history. His bias is against the Catholic Church and while there is little doubt that it was not on the side of progress, Trevelyan uses his most emotive language in describing its effect on society:
“The Papal Inquisition was not a mere name, but a terrible and active instrument of evil”
“The fate which Wycliffe feared for his country actually overtook in later years Italy, Spain, and to some degree France, where the clergy seized the helm of government and crushed underfoot political life and individual liberty”
Trevelyan is very good at describing the religious institutions in England and the power they were able to wield; he also gives a good account of the Peasants Uprising of 1481. He is at his best when telling the story of Wycliffe and the Lollards with his theme being that they were the precursors to the glorious Protestant movement that would sweep through England during the Tudor period. Trevelyan even carries their story beyond the time span of the book well into the sixteenth century.
Trevelyan’s book was written for the University student: my used copy comes from the University of Cambridge Board of Extramural studies, but it so well written that it avoids any dryness and provides today a very good read. I wanted to know more about Wycliffe and the Lollards and this book fulfilled that need. No doubt there is some bias and perhaps a few inaccuracies but I think Trevelyan’s take on this period is pretty near the mark. He has a downer on one or two of the major players; John of Gaunt for example, seems to get the blame for much of what goes wrong politically and of course the influence of the Lollard movement is probably overstressed, however I would not hesitate to recommend this. I gobbled it up 4 stars. show less
This is the first sentence from Chapter VIII of Trevelyan’s history/text book and it does a pretty good job of explaining the major theme of his book. It was originally published in 1899 and reprinted in several new editions since then, however the text has hardly been updated since its first Victorian publishing date. In a preface to the 1909 show more edition Trevelyan says that he has abandoned study of this period and so only feels competent to remove one or two positive errors. This is therefore a Victorian author’s history with the predilections of that era; a textbook written for English students. On page three his use of Our instead of England seems rather quaint today:
“Our importance in the Councils of Europe, the prosperity of our commerce and our military hold over France”
Trevelyan tackles the period from 1368 to 1395: a period when England was is decline for want of good leadership and reform of it’s institutions. Edward III was in his dotage and English military might was losing ground in France and at sea. Edward lingered on coming more and more under the influence of a self serving clique of courtiers and his mistress and witnessed the death of his son The Black Prince. He was eventually succeeded by Richard II a minor of 14 years (the son of the Black Prince), which resulted in the most powerful men of the realm jockeying for position around the guardians of the young king. Richard II proved not to be the strong leader that England needed and a worsening political and social climate led to the Peasants Uprising of 1381. This was eventually crushed, but lessons were not learned and England‘s political and social life continued to decline.
Trevelyan writes well and his narrative story flows on very effectively. He is good on describing the political situation particularly the relationship between the fledgling Commons, the Lords and the King and his court. The intrigues of the powerful nobles and the declining military situation are all woven into the narrative to give a fairly accurate account of the history. His bias is against the Catholic Church and while there is little doubt that it was not on the side of progress, Trevelyan uses his most emotive language in describing its effect on society:
“The Papal Inquisition was not a mere name, but a terrible and active instrument of evil”
“The fate which Wycliffe feared for his country actually overtook in later years Italy, Spain, and to some degree France, where the clergy seized the helm of government and crushed underfoot political life and individual liberty”
Trevelyan is very good at describing the religious institutions in England and the power they were able to wield; he also gives a good account of the Peasants Uprising of 1481. He is at his best when telling the story of Wycliffe and the Lollards with his theme being that they were the precursors to the glorious Protestant movement that would sweep through England during the Tudor period. Trevelyan even carries their story beyond the time span of the book well into the sixteenth century.
Trevelyan’s book was written for the University student: my used copy comes from the University of Cambridge Board of Extramural studies, but it so well written that it avoids any dryness and provides today a very good read. I wanted to know more about Wycliffe and the Lollards and this book fulfilled that need. No doubt there is some bias and perhaps a few inaccuracies but I think Trevelyan’s take on this period is pretty near the mark. He has a downer on one or two of the major players; John of Gaunt for example, seems to get the blame for much of what goes wrong politically and of course the influence of the Lollard movement is probably overstressed, however I would not hesitate to recommend this. I gobbled it up 4 stars. show less
I thought this would be a good, overview narrative history of the period listed, but it is more of a running commentary on the history, that we are supposed to already know. This stretched me a bit, as I am not always first hand familiar with the ways of Charles, James II, Pitt and Marlborough, but .... for what it is, this account is outstanding. I found myself buying the author's perspective frequently and when i didn't, the matter was left open in a good open way. Well organized and just show more enough background (history) to keep a person like me engaged. show less
What an amazing book, and to think it was published in 1904 when the author was 28!
The first two chapters are an overview of how people lived in the 1600's and their social connections. These two chapters should be read by anyone who is interested in the period, they are that good. The rest of the book is a history of the period 1603-1714. Every chapter can be read seperately but together they tell a complex and amazing story in a clear way.
The book is not perfect, The Stuart Kings never show more seem to have done anything good and his praise of the Tories is also very sparing. But not of the Whigs or Parliament who get a great deal of credit. The idea that history is on the march of progress and anyone who gets in the way shouldn't and anyone who pulls progress along should do so is very clear in the book. I also found the book alittle longer than I would have liked by a chapter or two, your mileage may be different.
In short the history is solid, the opinion, maybe not so much.
Overall 4 solid stars. show less
The first two chapters are an overview of how people lived in the 1600's and their social connections. These two chapters should be read by anyone who is interested in the period, they are that good. The rest of the book is a history of the period 1603-1714. Every chapter can be read seperately but together they tell a complex and amazing story in a clear way.
The book is not perfect, The Stuart Kings never show more seem to have done anything good and his praise of the Tories is also very sparing. But not of the Whigs or Parliament who get a great deal of credit. The idea that history is on the march of progress and anyone who gets in the way shouldn't and anyone who pulls progress along should do so is very clear in the book. I also found the book alittle longer than I would have liked by a chapter or two, your mileage may be different.
In short the history is solid, the opinion, maybe not so much.
Overall 4 solid stars. show less
Written in 1926, but full of great information and written in a lucid manner. I'm now convinced that Tolkien's elves, dwarves, and men, were really ethereal representatives of Normans, Vikings, and Anglo-Saxons. The one quibble I have is that he is obviously writing for English people who already have a good (and that's circa 1926 'good') understanding of English history.
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- Works
- 102
- Also by
- 9
- Members
- 3,718
- Popularity
- #6,811
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 30
- ISBNs
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