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I. R. Christie

Ian Ralph Christie, FBA (11 May 1919 – 25 November 1998) was a British historian specialising in late 18th-century Britain. He spent most of his academic career at University College London (UCL), from 1948 to 1984.

I. R. Christie

Born
Ian Ralph Christie

(1919-05-11)11 May 1919
Died25 November 1998(1998-11-25) (aged 79)
Spouse
Ann Hastings
(m. 1992)
Academic background
Alma mater
InfluencesLewis Namier
Academic work
DisciplineHistory
Sub-disciplineLate eighteenth century British political history
Institutions

Early life edit

He was born in Preston, Lancashire, to John Reid Christie and his wife, Gladys Lilian (née Whatley) Christie.[1] He was educated at home as he was unable to attend school due to glandular fever and a bronchial illness. After his recovery, he moved to Worcester to live with an aunt and was educated at Worcester Royal Grammar School (1931–38). He was senior prefect in his last year and his chosen sixth-form subjects were history and English literature.[2] He represented Worcester Grammar at the 1937 Empire Rally and was impressed with Stanley Baldwin's speech. However, he was opposed to appeasement, regarded Nazism as barbarism and treated left-wing opposition to rearmament with contempt.[3]

He went to Magdalen College, Oxford in 1938 to study modern history.[4] In 1940 C. S. Lewis taught him political theory but his studies were interrupted by the Second World War, where he volunteered for non-combatant duties (due to ill-health) in the Royal Air Force. He served in the equipment branch from August 1940 to April 1946 and ended as a commissioned officer. He later regarded his war service as the most important thing he had done in his life.[5] He spent periods of inactivity reading political theory, including Bertrand Russell's Power: A New Social Analysis and R. G. Collingwood's New Leviathan.[6]

He returned to Oxford in April 1946, where his history tutors were K. B. McFarlane and A. J. P. Taylor. Christie later wrote that he had "greatly enjoyed" Taylor's tutorials because he displayed his "iconoclastic thinking in a period of later modern British history which greatly interested me".[7] In 1948 his father died and he graduated later in the year with second class honours.[8][9]

Academic career edit

In 1948, whilst still at Oxford, J. E. Neale offered Christie an assistant lectureship in history at University College London. Christie accepted Neale's offer and replied: "Mr A. J. P. Taylor here has said he will procure me an introduction to Professor Namier in order that I may get advice on my proposed subject for research". Christie adopted Namier's historical method and his first work, The End of North's Ministry (1958), was the second volume in Namier's series, England in the Age of the American Revolution.[8][10] Christie paid tribute to Namier in the book's preface:

To Sir Lewis Namier I owe many thanks: first, when I had only met him in his books, for prompting in me a strong desire to know whether his picture of politics and party structure at the accession of George III was still valid for the period some twenty years later, when the political system was under strain as a result of defeat in the American War of Independence; and, since this study began, for his guidance and encouragement.[11]

A. J. P. Taylor, who had quarrelled with Namier a year before, said in his review of The End of North's Ministry that Christie had demonstrated that Namier's ideas about eighteenth century politics had been proved wrong by one of his leading disciples. Christie later wrote that Taylor's review had demonstrated "utter ignorance of the whole general thrust of my book".[12] He dedicated his last book, British ‘non-élite’ MPs, 1715–1820 (1995), to Namier.[13]

Christie held the assistant lectureship in history until 1951, when he was promoted to lecturer, a post he held until 1960. He was then appointed reader (1960–66) before being promoted to professor (1966–79), Dean of Arts (1971-73), chairman of the history department (1975–79) and Astor Professor of British History (1979–84).[8] In 1964 he became joint literary director (with Geoffrey Barrow) of the Royal Historical Society, which they held for six years.[14]

According to Negley Harte, Christie told him that he had become an historian "because he wanted to understand why for centuries intelligent people had believed in Christianity".[8] However, Christie said in his unpublished autobiography that he had tried at Oxford to steer clear of topics involving "the to me wearisome wranglings of past generations over religious issues".[9]

In his second work, Wilkes, Wyvill and Reform: The Parliamentary Reform Movement in British Politics, 1760–1785 (1962), Christie explored the movement for parliamentary reform that was led by John Wilkes and Christopher Wyvill. Christie said of the Unreformed House of Commons: "[B]y and large this extraordinary system worked not unsuccessfully" and was "appropriate to the Britain of its day".[15] John B. Owen called it an excellent general survey that superseded G. S. Veitch's The Genesis of Parliamentary Reform.[16]

His third book, Crisis of Empire, was a scholarly narrative of the relationship between Britain and the American colonies between 1754 and 1783.[17]

Christie wrote a considerable number of biographies for The History of Parliament's volume, The House of Commons, 1754–1790 (1964) but in 1969 he turned down the editorship of the 1790–1820 volumes due to his work at UCL.[14] From 1973 until 1996 he was a member of the editorial board of the History of Parliament Trust.[13] Christie also edited the third volume of Jeremy Bentham's correspondence for UCL's The Collected Works of Jeremy Bentham. He learnt Russian for this purpose, as Bentham had visited Catherine the Great in the hope that she would become an enlightened ruler.[13]

He became a Fellow of the British Academy in 1977.[8] When Anthony Blunt's treason was exposed in 1979, Christie said he would have resigned from the Academy if Blunt had not been expelled or resigned. This led to a breach with his former tutor, A. J. P. Taylor, who resigned from the Academy in protest against the treatment of Blunt.[18]

In 1983 he delivered the Ford Lectures at Oxford, on the reasons why Britain avoided revolution, which were subsequently published by Oxford University Press as Stress and Stability in Late Eighteenth-Century Britain (1984). Christie argued that eighteenth century Britain was a country where "oligarchical government stood foursquare on its foundations in the tacit consent of the people" and that "there was no danger of revolution in Britain in the 1790s".[19] What defeated revolutionary forces in Britain, Christie asserted, was "a deep-rooted pragmatism" rooted in "the slow evolution of the English common law".[20] He ended the work by quoting John of Gaunt's "sceptred isle" speech from William Shakespeare's Richard II.[21]

J. C. D. Clark said that Christie's theme in his Ford Lectures of a "deeply-shared sense of national identity" was perhaps "an unwelcome message to some of his audience", whose reaction was "often extremely cool".[22] P. D. G. Thomas argued that Christie's "convincing synthesis" refuted E. P. Thompson's The Making of the English Working Class and that "Christie's characteristically subtle and systematic analysis is clinched by the imaginative flourish that British prejudice against foreigners was an antidote to the contagion of revolution".[23]

In his retirement speech, Christie provoked controversy when he said that when he joined the department in 1948 there were great men in it, and that he was confident that one day there would be again.[8][10]

Christie was also opposed to the revisionist history of the Second World War: when Maurice Cowling published an article in the Sunday Telegraph on the 50th anniversary of the war that questioned whether Britain should have fought Germany in 1939, Christie drafted a long letter to the paper's editor (with an even longer covering letter to Cowling), in which he defended the necessity of a war in defence of civilisation and vigorously denounced the Holocaust.[6]

Personal life edit

In 1992 he married Ann Hastings.[8]

Works edit

  • The End of North's Ministry, 1780–82 (1958).
  • Wilkes, Wyvill and Reform: The Parliamentary Reform Movement in British Politics, 1760–1785 (1962).
  • Crisis of Empire: Great Britain and the American Colonies 1754-1783 (1966).
  • Myth and Reality in Late-Eighteenth-Century British Politics, and Other Papers (1970).
  • ‘The Historians' Quest for the American Revolution’, in Anne Whiteman, J. S. Bromley and P. G. M. Dickson (eds.), Statesmen, Scholars and Merchants: Essays in Eighteenth-Century History presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland (Oxford University Press, 1973), pp. 181–201.
  • Empire or independence, 1760-1776: a British-American dialogue on the coming of the American Revolution, co-edited with Benjamin W. Labaree, (1976).
  • Stress and Stability in Late Eighteenth-Century Britain: Reflections on the British Avoidance of Revolution (1984).
  • ‘George III and the historians: thirty years on’, History, new ser., 71 (1986), pp. 205–21.
  • ‘Party in Politics in the Age of Lord North's Administration’, Parliamentary History 6 (1987), pp. 47–68.
  • ‘Conservatism and stability in British society’, in Mark Philp (ed.), The French Revolution and British Popular Politics (Cambridge University Press, 1991), pp. 169–187.
  • British ‘non-élite’ MPs, 1715–1820 (1995).

Notes edit

  1. ^ J. H. Burns, 'Ian Ralph Christie, 1919–1998', Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 105 (2000), pp. 365–366.
  2. ^ Burns, pp. 367–68.
  3. ^ Burns, p. 368.
  4. ^ Burns, p. 369.
  5. ^ Burns, pp. 370–71.
  6. ^ a b Burns, p. 371.
  7. ^ Burns, p. 372.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Negley Harte, 'Obituary: Professor Ian R. Christie', The Independent (5 December 1998), retrieved 12 January 2020.
  9. ^ a b Burns, p. 373.
  10. ^ a b Burns p. 374.
  11. ^ I. R. Christie, The End of North's Ministry, 1780–82 (London: Macmillan, 1958), p. v.
  12. ^ Burns, p. 375.
  13. ^ a b c Burns, p. 377.
  14. ^ a b Burns, p. 376.
  15. ^ John Cannon, 'Review: Wilkes, Wyvil and Reform by Ian Christie', History, Vol. 49, No. 165 (1964), p. 83.
  16. ^ John B. Owen, 'Review: Wilkes, Wyvil and Reform by Ian R. Christie', The English Historical Review, Vol. 79, No. 313 (Oct., 1964), pp. 861-862.
  17. ^ George C. Rogers, Jr., 'Review: Crisis of Empire: Great Britain and the American Colonies, 1754-1783 by I. R. Christie', The English Historical Review, Vol. 83, No. 326 (Jan., 1968), pp. 190-191.
  18. ^ Burns, p. 378.
  19. ^ Burns, pp. 382–83.
  20. ^ Burns, p. 383–84.
  21. ^ Burns, p. 384.
  22. ^ Burns, p. 384 + n. 35.
  23. ^ P. D. G. Thomas, 'Review: Stress and Stability in Late Eighteenth-Century Britain', History, Vol. 71, No. 231 (February 1986), p. 164.

christie, ralph, christie, 1919, november, 1998, british, historian, specialising, late, 18th, century, britain, spent, most, academic, career, university, college, london, from, 1948, 1984, fbabornian, ralph, christie, 1919, 1919preston, lancashiredied25, nov. Ian Ralph Christie FBA 11 May 1919 25 November 1998 was a British historian specialising in late 18th century Britain He spent most of his academic career at University College London UCL from 1948 to 1984 I R ChristieFBABornIan Ralph Christie 1919 05 11 11 May 1919Preston LancashireDied25 November 1998 1998 11 25 aged 79 Poole DorsetSpouseAnn Hastings m 1992 wbr Academic backgroundAlma materMagdalen College OxfordInfluencesLewis NamierAcademic workDisciplineHistorySub disciplineLate eighteenth century British political historyInstitutionsUniversity College London 1948 1984 Contents 1 Early life 2 Academic career 3 Personal life 4 Works 5 NotesEarly life editHe was born in Preston Lancashire to John Reid Christie and his wife Gladys Lilian nee Whatley Christie 1 He was educated at home as he was unable to attend school due to glandular fever and a bronchial illness After his recovery he moved to Worcester to live with an aunt and was educated at Worcester Royal Grammar School 1931 38 He was senior prefect in his last year and his chosen sixth form subjects were history and English literature 2 He represented Worcester Grammar at the 1937 Empire Rally and was impressed with Stanley Baldwin s speech However he was opposed to appeasement regarded Nazism as barbarism and treated left wing opposition to rearmament with contempt 3 He went to Magdalen College Oxford in 1938 to study modern history 4 In 1940 C S Lewis taught him political theory but his studies were interrupted by the Second World War where he volunteered for non combatant duties due to ill health in the Royal Air Force He served in the equipment branch from August 1940 to April 1946 and ended as a commissioned officer He later regarded his war service as the most important thing he had done in his life 5 He spent periods of inactivity reading political theory including Bertrand Russell s Power A New Social Analysis and R G Collingwood s New Leviathan 6 He returned to Oxford in April 1946 where his history tutors were K B McFarlane and A J P Taylor Christie later wrote that he had greatly enjoyed Taylor s tutorials because he displayed his iconoclastic thinking in a period of later modern British history which greatly interested me 7 In 1948 his father died and he graduated later in the year with second class honours 8 9 Academic career editIn 1948 whilst still at Oxford J E Neale offered Christie an assistant lectureship in history at University College London Christie accepted Neale s offer and replied Mr A J P Taylor here has said he will procure me an introduction to Professor Namier in order that I may get advice on my proposed subject for research Christie adopted Namier s historical method and his first work The End of North s Ministry 1958 was the second volume in Namier s series England in the Age of the American Revolution 8 10 Christie paid tribute to Namier in the book s preface To Sir Lewis Namier I owe many thanks first when I had only met him in his books for prompting in me a strong desire to know whether his picture of politics and party structure at the accession of George III was still valid for the period some twenty years later when the political system was under strain as a result of defeat in the American War of Independence and since this study began for his guidance and encouragement 11 A J P Taylor who had quarrelled with Namier a year before said in his review of The End of North s Ministry that Christie had demonstrated that Namier s ideas about eighteenth century politics had been proved wrong by one of his leading disciples Christie later wrote that Taylor s review had demonstrated utter ignorance of the whole general thrust of my book 12 He dedicated his last book British non elite MPs 1715 1820 1995 to Namier 13 Christie held the assistant lectureship in history until 1951 when he was promoted to lecturer a post he held until 1960 He was then appointed reader 1960 66 before being promoted to professor 1966 79 Dean of Arts 1971 73 chairman of the history department 1975 79 and Astor Professor of British History 1979 84 8 In 1964 he became joint literary director with Geoffrey Barrow of the Royal Historical Society which they held for six years 14 According to Negley Harte Christie told him that he had become an historian because he wanted to understand why for centuries intelligent people had believed in Christianity 8 However Christie said in his unpublished autobiography that he had tried at Oxford to steer clear of topics involving the to me wearisome wranglings of past generations over religious issues 9 In his second work Wilkes Wyvill and Reform The Parliamentary Reform Movement in British Politics 1760 1785 1962 Christie explored the movement for parliamentary reform that was led by John Wilkes and Christopher Wyvill Christie said of the Unreformed House of Commons B y and large this extraordinary system worked not unsuccessfully and was appropriate to the Britain of its day 15 John B Owen called it an excellent general survey that superseded G S Veitch s The Genesis of Parliamentary Reform 16 His third book Crisis of Empire was a scholarly narrative of the relationship between Britain and the American colonies between 1754 and 1783 17 Christie wrote a considerable number of biographies for The History of Parliament s volume The House of Commons 1754 1790 1964 but in 1969 he turned down the editorship of the 1790 1820 volumes due to his work at UCL 14 From 1973 until 1996 he was a member of the editorial board of the History of Parliament Trust 13 Christie also edited the third volume of Jeremy Bentham s correspondence for UCL s The Collected Works of Jeremy Bentham He learnt Russian for this purpose as Bentham had visited Catherine the Great in the hope that she would become an enlightened ruler 13 He became a Fellow of the British Academy in 1977 8 When Anthony Blunt s treason was exposed in 1979 Christie said he would have resigned from the Academy if Blunt had not been expelled or resigned This led to a breach with his former tutor A J P Taylor who resigned from the Academy in protest against the treatment of Blunt 18 In 1983 he delivered the Ford Lectures at Oxford on the reasons why Britain avoided revolution which were subsequently published by Oxford University Press as Stress and Stability in Late Eighteenth Century Britain 1984 Christie argued that eighteenth century Britain was a country where oligarchical government stood foursquare on its foundations in the tacit consent of the people and that there was no danger of revolution in Britain in the 1790s 19 What defeated revolutionary forces in Britain Christie asserted was a deep rooted pragmatism rooted in the slow evolution of the English common law 20 He ended the work by quoting John of Gaunt s sceptred isle speech from William Shakespeare s Richard II 21 J C D Clark said that Christie s theme in his Ford Lectures of a deeply shared sense of national identity was perhaps an unwelcome message to some of his audience whose reaction was often extremely cool 22 P D G Thomas argued that Christie s convincing synthesis refuted E P Thompson s The Making of the English Working Class and that Christie s characteristically subtle and systematic analysis is clinched by the imaginative flourish that British prejudice against foreigners was an antidote to the contagion of revolution 23 In his retirement speech Christie provoked controversy when he said that when he joined the department in 1948 there were great men in it and that he was confident that one day there would be again 8 10 Christie was also opposed to the revisionist history of the Second World War when Maurice Cowling published an article in the Sunday Telegraph on the 50th anniversary of the war that questioned whether Britain should have fought Germany in 1939 Christie drafted a long letter to the paper s editor with an even longer covering letter to Cowling in which he defended the necessity of a war in defence of civilisation and vigorously denounced the Holocaust 6 Personal life editIn 1992 he married Ann Hastings 8 Works editThe End of North s Ministry 1780 82 1958 Wilkes Wyvill and Reform The Parliamentary Reform Movement in British Politics 1760 1785 1962 Crisis of Empire Great Britain and the American Colonies 1754 1783 1966 Myth and Reality in Late Eighteenth Century British Politics and Other Papers 1970 The Historians Quest for the American Revolution in Anne Whiteman J S Bromley and P G M Dickson eds Statesmen Scholars and Merchants Essays in Eighteenth Century History presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland Oxford University Press 1973 pp 181 201 Empire or independence 1760 1776 a British American dialogue on the coming of the American Revolution co edited with Benjamin W Labaree 1976 Stress and Stability in Late Eighteenth Century Britain Reflections on the British Avoidance of Revolution 1984 George III and the historians thirty years on History new ser 71 1986 pp 205 21 Party in Politics in the Age of Lord North s Administration Parliamentary History 6 1987 pp 47 68 Conservatism and stability in British society in Mark Philp ed The French Revolution and British Popular Politics Cambridge University Press 1991 pp 169 187 British non elite MPs 1715 1820 1995 Notes edit J H Burns Ian Ralph Christie 1919 1998 Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 105 2000 pp 365 366 Burns pp 367 68 Burns p 368 Burns p 369 Burns pp 370 71 a b Burns p 371 Burns p 372 a b c d e f g Negley Harte Obituary Professor Ian R Christie The Independent 5 December 1998 retrieved 12 January 2020 a b Burns p 373 a b Burns p 374 I R Christie The End of North s Ministry 1780 82 London Macmillan 1958 p v Burns p 375 a b c Burns p 377 a b Burns p 376 John Cannon Review Wilkes Wyvil and Reform by Ian Christie History Vol 49 No 165 1964 p 83 John B Owen Review Wilkes Wyvil and Reform by Ian R Christie The English Historical Review Vol 79 No 313 Oct 1964 pp 861 862 George C Rogers Jr Review Crisis of Empire Great Britain and the American Colonies 1754 1783 by I R Christie The English Historical Review Vol 83 No 326 Jan 1968 pp 190 191 Burns p 378 Burns pp 382 83 Burns p 383 84 Burns p 384 Burns p 384 n 35 P D G Thomas Review Stress and Stability in Late Eighteenth Century Britain History Vol 71 No 231 February 1986 p 164 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title I R Christie amp oldid 1154807711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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