Hugh Trevor-Roper (1914–2003)
Author of History of the Decline and Fall of Roman Empire [complete]
About the Author
Hugh Redwald Trevor-Roper was born at Glanton, England on January 15, 1914. He studied modern history at Christ Church, Oxford, and soon afterwards he published a study of Archbishop Laud. During the World War II, he worked in British intelligence. In 1945, he was assigned by his superiors to write show more a report on the death of Hitler, which became The Last Days of Hitler. After the war, he taught history at Christ Church, where he was made Regius Professor of Modern History from 1957 to 1980. In 1979, Margaret Thatcher made Trevor-Roper a life peer as Lord Dacre of Glanton. He was then Master of Peterhouse College, Cambridge from 1980 until he retired in 1987. Trevor-Roper's scholarly reputation suffered in April 1983 when he authenticated about 60 volumes said to be Hitler's diaries, which turned out to be falsified. His other works included The Rise of Christian Europe, The European Witch Craze of the 16th and 17th Centuries, From Counter Reformation to Glorious Revolution, and The Philby Affair. He died on January 26, 2003 at the age of 89. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Works by Hugh Trevor-Roper
History of the Decline and Fall of Roman Empire [complete] (1788) — Introduction, some editions; Introduction, some editions; Editor — 3,617 copies, 42 reviews
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Vols. 4-6 {unabridged - Everyman 6v.} (1994) — Editor — 307 copies
The Crisis of the 17th Century: Religion, the Reformation, and Social Change (2001) 108 copies, 1 review
Princes and Artists: Patronage and Ideology at Four Hapsburg Courts 1517-1633 (1976) 95 copies, 2 reviews
The Secret World: Behind the Curtain of British Intelligence in World War II and the Cold War (2014) 27 copies
History : professional and lay : an inaugural lecture delivered before the University of Oxford on 12 November,1957 (1957) 6 copies
The Romantic movement and the study of history: the John Coffin memorial lecture delivered before the University of Lond (1969) 3 copies
The Last Days of Hitler 1 copy
Thomas More - Utopia 1 copy
Letters of Mercurius 1 copy
Galdrafarid i Evropu 1 copy
Sfârșitul lui Hitler 1 copy
Associated Works
The Good Old Days: The Holocaust as Seen by Its Perpetrators and Bystanders (1988) — Foreword, some editions — 512 copies, 5 reviews
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Vol. 1 {unabridged - Modern Library 3v.} A.D. 180 to A.D. 395 (1776) — Introduction, some editions — 355 copies, 4 reviews
Final Entries 1945: The Diaries of Joseph Goebbels (1977) — Editor, some editions — 348 copies, 6 reviews
Hitler's Table Talk, 1941-1944: His Private Conversations (1973) — Introduction, some editions — 258 copies, 7 reviews
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire {abridged by Trevor-Roper} (2005) — Editor — 204 copies, 2 reviews
The Man with the Miraculous Hands: The Fantastic Story of Felix Kersten, Himmler's Private Doctor (1971) — Foreword, some editions — 149 copies, 6 reviews
The Professor and the Parson: A Story of Desire, Deceit and Defrocking (2019) — Subject — 140 copies, 6 reviews
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Vol. 4 {unabridged - Everyman 6v.} (1788) — Introduction, some editions — 45 copies
Josephus: The Jewish War And Other Selections from Flavius Josephus. Translated by H. St J. Thackeray and Ralph Marcus / Edited and Abridged with an Introduction by Moses I.… (1966) — Series Editor — 20 copies
Voltaire: The Age of Louis XIV and Other Selected Writings (1963) — Series Editor — 17 copies, 1 review
Thucydides: The Peloponnesian War. Translated by Benjamin Jowett / Revised and Abridged with an Introduction by P. A. Brunt (The Great Histories) (1963) — Series Editor — 15 copies
A vindication of some passages in the fifteenth and sixteenth chapters of The history of the decline and fall of the Roman Empire (1961) — Preface, some editions — 11 copies
The Bormann Letters: The Private Correspondence Between Martin Bormann and His Wife from January 1943 to April 1945 (1981) — Editor — 8 copies
The Goebbels diaries, the last days — Editor, some editions — 5 copies
The testament of Adolf Hitler: The Hitler-Bormann documents, February-April 1945 (1978) — Introduction, some editions — 5 copies
Tacitus: The Annals and the Histories. The Church-Brodribb translation, edited, abridged and with an introduction by Hugh Lloyd-Jones (The Great Histories) (1966) — Series Editor — 5 copies
The poems of Richard Corbett — Editor, some editions — 2 copies
The Journal of Law & Economics Vol. XIX (3): 1776: The Revolution in Social Thought — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Trevor-Roper, Hugh
- Legal name
- Trevor-Roper, Hugh Redwald (birth name)
- Other names
- Trevor-Roper, H. R.
Baron Dacre of Glanton - Birthdate
- 1914-01-15
- Date of death
- 2003-01-26
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Christ Church College, Oxford University (B.A. | 1936)
Merton College, Oxford University (M.A. | 1939)
Charterhouse, Godalming, Surrey, England, UK - Occupations
- historian
university professor - Organizations
- Secret Intelligence Service
Oxford University
Cambridge University (Peterhouse College)
Stubbs Society
Freemason
British Army (WWII) - Awards and honors
- Fellow, British Academy (1969)
Fellow, Royal Historical Society
Fellow, Society of Antiquaries of London
American Academy of Arts & Sciences (International Honorary Member | 1961)
Life peerage (Baron Dacre of Glanton ∙ 1979)
Chevalier, Ordre de la Légion d'honneur (1975) - Relationships
- Trevor-Roper, Patrick D. (brother)
- Cause of death
- oesophageal cancer
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Glanton, Northumberland, England, UK
- Places of residence
- Glanton, Northumberland, England, UK
- Place of death
- Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
- Map Location
- England, UK
Members
Discussions
Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire in George Macy devotees (May 2025)
Folio Archives 272: Decline & Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon 1995 in Folio Society Devotees (May 2022)
Gibbon's "Decline and Fall" footnote in Ancient History (July 2010)
Reviews
In 1973, a distinguished Swiss physician handed to the British historian Hugh Trevor-Roper an enameled Chinese case containing two previously unknown memoirs by Edmund Backhouse, to be delivered to the Bodleian Library at Oxford, which already housed thousands of Chinese books and manuscripts donated by Backhouse. Trevor-Roper knew of Backhouse as a former member of the British Secret Service and the co-author of books on the Empress Dowager and the imperial court of old Peking. Upon reading show more the newly discovered works, Trevor-Roper realized, to his surprise and dismay, that the memoirs ‘were of no ordinary obscenity.’ (They were published in 2011 as Decadence Mandchoue). Like A.J.A. Symons, whose discovery of the pornographic Venetian letters of Frederick Rolfe drove him on his Quest for Corvo, Trevor-Roper set out ‘to pursue the elusive and preposterous personality’ of Backhouse.
The story he tells in Hermit of Peking is stranger than fiction. Sinologist, secret agent, arms broker, envoy of the American Bank Note Company and the shipbuilder John Brown & Company, and by his own account confidant of court eunuchs and erotic playmate of the Empress Dowager—Backhouse lived a life scarcely to be believed. But the truth is not really the object here, by my lights. Trevor-Roper paints Backhouse as a master fabulist, and himself as the authoritative debunker, but any man who like Backhouse makes of his very flesh a great poem (and of his life a randy memoir) is to be commended. show less
The story he tells in Hermit of Peking is stranger than fiction. Sinologist, secret agent, arms broker, envoy of the American Bank Note Company and the shipbuilder John Brown & Company, and by his own account confidant of court eunuchs and erotic playmate of the Empress Dowager—Backhouse lived a life scarcely to be believed. But the truth is not really the object here, by my lights. Trevor-Roper paints Backhouse as a master fabulist, and himself as the authoritative debunker, but any man who like Backhouse makes of his very flesh a great poem (and of his life a randy memoir) is to be commended. show less
Best narrative history ever written. Gibbon had so many fewer sources and tools than we have today, but his basic conclusions from the late 18th century information he had are still largely correct today.
A weakened military and political state that relied heavily on barbarian mercenary soldiers for defense was doomed. The different internal barbarian factions just served to divide the military and political and religious structures to a point to where they were easy pickin's from both inside show more and outside the empire. The western empire falling first while the eastern (Greek) Byzantine empire, under less external pressure, survives much longer. (Until their Roman Christian Crusader brothers came to sack them.)
Gibbons details the whole ugly mess down to minute detail and doesn't leave anything out, from incest to slaughter. His narrative is lively and opinionated, full of both shock and humor.
Read the whole damned thing, footnotes and all, not some abridged abomination. This is a literary work as much as an historical work.
Anyone who needs an abject lesson on how the modern western world is going to go, should read these books. We're already in the age of bread and circuses. show less
A weakened military and political state that relied heavily on barbarian mercenary soldiers for defense was doomed. The different internal barbarian factions just served to divide the military and political and religious structures to a point to where they were easy pickin's from both inside show more and outside the empire. The western empire falling first while the eastern (Greek) Byzantine empire, under less external pressure, survives much longer. (Until their Roman Christian Crusader brothers came to sack them.)
Gibbons details the whole ugly mess down to minute detail and doesn't leave anything out, from incest to slaughter. His narrative is lively and opinionated, full of both shock and humor.
Read the whole damned thing, footnotes and all, not some abridged abomination. This is a literary work as much as an historical work.
Anyone who needs an abject lesson on how the modern western world is going to go, should read these books. We're already in the age of bread and circuses. show less
Trevor-Roper demolishes any remnant reputation that "master forger" Sir Edmund Backhouse might have retained. The author worked tirelessly to investigate the fantastic historical creations and the fraudulent business transactions that Backhouse perpetrated in China during his hermetic life in Peking.
What ensues is an eviscerating exposure of an aesthetic exile from late Victorian England who brilliantly defrauded and confused others in a manic-depressive quest for respectability.
What ensues is an eviscerating exposure of an aesthetic exile from late Victorian England who brilliantly defrauded and confused others in a manic-depressive quest for respectability.
An 18th century exploration into the events surrounding the Roman Empire and its territories from ca. 180 until the 15th century.
The author is an 18th century Brit who has granted the ancient Romans their conceit, and the work must be read and understood in that light. One of the great opportunities for reflection in reading this work in the early 21st century is to consider what Europe, north Africa, and western Asia must have looked like to someone living in 1776, and the different forms show more of continuity and discontinuity which are maintained. As an example, Gibbon confesses how there are some areas of Italy which, in his day, had not yet recovered in population from the Byzantine-Gothic wars and the bubonic plague of the middle of the 6th century; we would not be able to make such an observation on the other side of the population boom which has attended to the industrial revolution.
Gibbon does well at considering not just secondary but especially primary sources, and he is rather opaque about his biases and prejudices regarding them. The length of discourse ebbs and flows with the amount and quality of these witnesses: the introductory books set forth the condition of the Empire in the days of the Antonines, the generally confessed high point of the Roman Empire, and fills in some of the details about the infrastructure of the Empire as it had developed from the days of Augustus. Then over a few books Gibbon covers the long/awful "third century" of 180-280 and all of the trials of the Empire. The fourth century resurgence and crisis defeats of 280-400 are covered in many books, including discussions of the development of Christianity, and thus ends the first modern volume. Then Gibbon gets to the collapse of the Empire at the hands of the German tribes in the West, and the maintenance of the Empire in the East. Over many books we read of Justinian, his conquests, and his law code; Gibbon has precious little to say about the Justinian plague beyond its virulence. Gibbon quickly covers Justinian through Heraclius, and the second modern volume ends with his characterization of the various Emperors from Heraclius until Isaac Angelus and the Latin conquest of Constantinople. The third modern volume covers the medieval period, and does so in two phases: from 600-1200, looking in across the world of the former Roman Empire and the exploits in Italy, Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire, Muhammad, the rise of Islam, the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates, the Bulgarians, Russians, Normans, the Turks, and then the Crusades, leading to the Fourth Crusade. Then Gibbon does something similar with the 1200-1450 period: the Greek loss of Constantinople, their fragmented empires, and recovery of Constantinople; the Mongols and the rise of the Ottomans; relationship between Byzantium and the West; the final loss of the Eastern Roman Empire; and Gibbon concludes by considering Rome itself from the tenth century until the end of the Great Schism. He then renders some conclusions.
Gibbon is often criticized for how he blames the fall of Rome on Christianity. I did not perceive in his work any truly monocausal explanation of this sort. In places where he would presume Christianity would have loosened the "martial spirit" of the Romans, he would be misguided. While Gibbon is a man of the Enlightenment - and in his notes you can tell he is a big fan of Hume and the Scottish Enlightenment in particular - his explorations of the various doctrinal controversies are well expressed and reasoned, and he seems less condemnatory of the religion itself and much more fatigued with the constant in-fighting over ultimately speculative matters. And in truth the divisions within Christianity absolutely weakened the standing of the Empire: when the Coptic Christians of Egypt welcomed the conquest of the Muslims so they would no longer be under the yoke of Constantinople, that tells you something; a big part of the ultimate end of the Byzantine Empire was the division and hostility engendered between them and the Catholics to the west.
What should stand out about this narrative, both as told by Gibbon and in general, is not about how Rome declined and fell, as if we can thus read the tea leaves about how such powers decline and fall in order to ameliorate our own, because all powers invariably rise, decline, and fall. Instead, it should be about the resilience of the Roman Empire: the miracle is not that it collapsed, but that it endured for so long in reality, and has never been exorcised from the mentality of Europeans ever since. "Caesars" as Kaisers and Czars and Sultans ruled in Europe until only a century ago; one cannot understand medieval and modern European history without grappling with how the Roman Empire continually captured their imagination.
The most modern research leads us to put far more weight on the role of climate change and its attendant consequences: more challenging food growing conditions which can quickly lead to greater ravaging and repine, the ferret and the transmission of the bubonic plague, and thus a devastation in the 6th century which leaves its mark in the archaeological record for over a century and which the world of Late Antiquity could not adequately recover (and, as seen above, in some respects, had not even recovered by the time the United States of America came into being!). If we're looking for a big lesson from Rome about how powers fall, that's the one we should heed. show less
The author is an 18th century Brit who has granted the ancient Romans their conceit, and the work must be read and understood in that light. One of the great opportunities for reflection in reading this work in the early 21st century is to consider what Europe, north Africa, and western Asia must have looked like to someone living in 1776, and the different forms show more of continuity and discontinuity which are maintained. As an example, Gibbon confesses how there are some areas of Italy which, in his day, had not yet recovered in population from the Byzantine-Gothic wars and the bubonic plague of the middle of the 6th century; we would not be able to make such an observation on the other side of the population boom which has attended to the industrial revolution.
Gibbon does well at considering not just secondary but especially primary sources, and he is rather opaque about his biases and prejudices regarding them. The length of discourse ebbs and flows with the amount and quality of these witnesses: the introductory books set forth the condition of the Empire in the days of the Antonines, the generally confessed high point of the Roman Empire, and fills in some of the details about the infrastructure of the Empire as it had developed from the days of Augustus. Then over a few books Gibbon covers the long/awful "third century" of 180-280 and all of the trials of the Empire. The fourth century resurgence and crisis defeats of 280-400 are covered in many books, including discussions of the development of Christianity, and thus ends the first modern volume. Then Gibbon gets to the collapse of the Empire at the hands of the German tribes in the West, and the maintenance of the Empire in the East. Over many books we read of Justinian, his conquests, and his law code; Gibbon has precious little to say about the Justinian plague beyond its virulence. Gibbon quickly covers Justinian through Heraclius, and the second modern volume ends with his characterization of the various Emperors from Heraclius until Isaac Angelus and the Latin conquest of Constantinople. The third modern volume covers the medieval period, and does so in two phases: from 600-1200, looking in across the world of the former Roman Empire and the exploits in Italy, Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire, Muhammad, the rise of Islam, the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates, the Bulgarians, Russians, Normans, the Turks, and then the Crusades, leading to the Fourth Crusade. Then Gibbon does something similar with the 1200-1450 period: the Greek loss of Constantinople, their fragmented empires, and recovery of Constantinople; the Mongols and the rise of the Ottomans; relationship between Byzantium and the West; the final loss of the Eastern Roman Empire; and Gibbon concludes by considering Rome itself from the tenth century until the end of the Great Schism. He then renders some conclusions.
Gibbon is often criticized for how he blames the fall of Rome on Christianity. I did not perceive in his work any truly monocausal explanation of this sort. In places where he would presume Christianity would have loosened the "martial spirit" of the Romans, he would be misguided. While Gibbon is a man of the Enlightenment - and in his notes you can tell he is a big fan of Hume and the Scottish Enlightenment in particular - his explorations of the various doctrinal controversies are well expressed and reasoned, and he seems less condemnatory of the religion itself and much more fatigued with the constant in-fighting over ultimately speculative matters. And in truth the divisions within Christianity absolutely weakened the standing of the Empire: when the Coptic Christians of Egypt welcomed the conquest of the Muslims so they would no longer be under the yoke of Constantinople, that tells you something; a big part of the ultimate end of the Byzantine Empire was the division and hostility engendered between them and the Catholics to the west.
What should stand out about this narrative, both as told by Gibbon and in general, is not about how Rome declined and fell, as if we can thus read the tea leaves about how such powers decline and fall in order to ameliorate our own, because all powers invariably rise, decline, and fall. Instead, it should be about the resilience of the Roman Empire: the miracle is not that it collapsed, but that it endured for so long in reality, and has never been exorcised from the mentality of Europeans ever since. "Caesars" as Kaisers and Czars and Sultans ruled in Europe until only a century ago; one cannot understand medieval and modern European history without grappling with how the Roman Empire continually captured their imagination.
The most modern research leads us to put far more weight on the role of climate change and its attendant consequences: more challenging food growing conditions which can quickly lead to greater ravaging and repine, the ferret and the transmission of the bubonic plague, and thus a devastation in the 6th century which leaves its mark in the archaeological record for over a century and which the world of Late Antiquity could not adequately recover (and, as seen above, in some respects, had not even recovered by the time the United States of America came into being!). If we're looking for a big lesson from Rome about how powers fall, that's the one we should heed. show less
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