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C. V. Wedgwood

Dame Cicely Veronica Wedgwood, OM, DBE, FBA, FRHistS (20 July 1910 – 9 March 1997) was an English historian who published under the name C. V. Wedgwood. Specializing in the history of 17th-century England and continental Europe, her biographies and narrative histories are said to have provided a clear, entertaining middle ground between popular and scholarly works.


Veronica Wedgwood

Wedgwood in 1969, by Godfrey Argent
BornCicely Veronica Wedgwood
(1910-07-20)20 July 1910
Stocksfield, England
Died9 March 1997(1997-03-09) (aged 86)
London, England
OccupationHistorian
NationalityBritish
Alma materLady Margaret Hall, Oxford
Period1935–1987
Subject17th century Europe
Notable worksThe Thirty Years War (1938)
PartnerJacqueline Hope-Wallace
Relatives

Early life edit

Wedgwood was born in Stocksfield, Northumberland, on 20 July 1910. She was the only daughter of Sir Ralph Wedgwood, Bt, a railway executive, and his wife Iris Wedgwood (née Pawson), a novelist and travel writer. Her brother was the politician and industrialist Sir John Wedgwood. Veronica Wedgwood was a great-great-great-granddaughter of the potter and abolitionist Josiah Wedgwood.[1] Her uncle was the politician Josiah Wedgwood, later 1st Baron Wedgwood.

She was educated at home, and then at Norland Place School. She earned a First in Classics and Modern History at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, where A. L. Rowse said she was "my first outstanding pupil".[2] In 1932, she enrolled for a PhD at the London School of Economics under the supervision of R. H. Tawney, but never completed it.[3]

Career edit

Wedgwood published her first biography, Strafford, at the age of 25 and The Thirty Years War, "her big book ... covering a large canvas", according to Rowse, just three years later,[2] a work Patrick Leigh Fermor called "[b]y far the best and most exciting book on the whole period".[4]

She specialised in European history of the 16th and 17th centuries. Her work in continental European history included the major study The Thirty Years War (1938) and biographies of William the Silent and Cardinal Richelieu. She devoted the greater part of her research to English history, especially in the English Civil War. Her major works included a biography of Oliver Cromwell and two volumes of a planned trilogy, The Great Rebellion, which included The King's Peace (1955) and The King's War (1958). She continued the story with The Trial of Charles I (1964). She was known to walk battlefields and experience the same weather and field conditions as the subjects of her histories, mindful that Cromwell had no military experience and most participants in the English Civil War were "talented amateurs" when it came to military manoeuvres.[5] The subject was one of great controversy and rival schools of historical interpretations, but she held herself apart, "probably put off by the sheer scholasticism into which the treatment of the subject had degenerated, the rudeness with which academics treated each other over it, when she herself was always courteous and lady-like." Instead, "what was remarkable about Wedgwood's view of the Civil War was the way in which she depicted the sheer confusion of it all, the impossibility of co-ordinating events in three countries, once order from the centre had broken down".[2]

Of William the Silent (1944), Rowse wrote that she "displayed not only a mastery of research but maturity of judgement, with a literary capacity not common in academic writing. She wrote indeed to be read, and not surprisingly the book began for her a long procession of prizes and honours..."[2] The New York Times singled it out as a landmark: "Miracles do happen. A generation ago the young English woman historian was often tethered to a dry theme until she had nibbled it bald. Today she dares much more to select a major subject", and praised her scholarship for balancing complex details with human drama: "Miss Wedgwood has not faltered before the intricacy or magnitude of this checkered struggle, and hers is a glowing, substantial, ingeniously organized book."[6]

Thirty years after she published a biography of Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford, she published a much-revised version that was considerably more critical of her subject. In the earlier version she called him a "sincere, brave and able man". After using a collection of his family's papers that had not previously been available, she deemed him greedy and unscrupulous.[5]

She was well regarded in academic circles and her books were widely read. She was also successful as a lecturer and broadcaster. In 1953 the BBC invited her to present her impressions of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.[7][a] She was a tutor at Somerville College, Oxford,[8] and she was a Special Lecturer at University College London from 1962 to 1991.[2] According to The Economist, she "had a novelist's talent for entering into the character of the giants of history." She published using her initials C.V. as a nom de plume to disguise her gender, aware of prejudice against women as serious historians.[5][b] She wrote as well about the historian's responsibility to do more than analyse or describe. Rather than pose as a disinterested observer, she wrote: "Historians should always draw morals."[5] She offered her own alternative to the neatness provided by theory: "[T]he whole value of the study of history is for me its delightful undermining of certainty, its cumulative insistence of the differences of point of view ... it is not lack of prejudice which makes for dull history, but lack of passion."[10]

George Steiner, complaining that "[m]uch of what passes for history at present is scarcely literate", set Wedgwood apart:[11]

One of the few contemporary historians prepared to defend openly the poetic nature of all historical imagining is C. V. Wedgwood. She fully concedes that all style brings with it the possibility of distortion: "There is no literary style which may not at some point take away something from the ascertainable outline of truth, which it is the task of scholarship to excavate and re-establish."

She acknowledged that contemporary concerns affected her historical assessments. In the 1957 introduction to a new release of The Thirty Years War, which first appeared in 1938, she wrote: "I wrote this book in the thirties, against the background of depression at home and mounting tension abroad. The preoccupations of that unhappy time cast their shadows over its pages."[12] She replied to critics of her attention to biography and the role of the individual in history:[10]

The individual—stupendous and beautiful paradox—is at once infinitesimal dust and the cause of all things. ... I prefer this overestimate to the opposite method which treats developments as though they were the massive anonymous waves of an inhuman sea or pulverizes the fallible surviving records of human life into the grey dust of statistics.

Her biographies and narrative histories are said to have "provided a clear, entertaining middle ground between popular and scholarly works".[13]

By 1966 her reputation and notoriety were sufficient to allow the authors of a study of The Nature of Narrative to invoke her name in reference to the tradition of historical scholarship: "... medieval traditional poetic narratives contained allusions to verifiable historical events [although] their history was not such as Tacitus, Bede, or C. V. Wedgwood might have written."[14]

In 1946 she translated Elias Canetti's Die Blendung, as Auto-da-Fé, under the author's supervision, though a modern scholar who considers Wedgwood's work on it "ordinarily quite excellent" doubts Canetti reviewed it in detail. He suspects she hesitated to present discussions of misogyny and antisemitism quite openly.[15][c]

Her book The Last of the Radicals (1951), was about her uncle Josiah Wedgwood, 1st Baron Wedgwood. She completed just one volume of her planned Short History of the World (1985) before illness prevented her from continuing the project.[1]

Her essays, many later published in small collections, appeared originally in Lady Rhondda's Time and Tide where she held editor posts from 1944 to 1952, and in the Times Literary Supplement, The Spectator, and other periodicals.[10] Garrett Mattingly praised the essays in Truth and Opinion (1960) for "displaying (or concealing, rather, but always molded and controlled by) that exquisite sense of form, in a medium apparently almost formless, which is the first-rate essayist's most precious gift."[17]

Personal life edit

She was active in numerous societies, including the London arm of the International Pen Club in London, where she was president from 1951 to 1957, as well as the Society of Authors (president, 1972–1977) and the London Library. She was appointed as the non-legal member on the Judicial Committee advising Home Secretary on deprivation of citizenship in 1948.[18] She served on the Arts Council from 1958 to 1961 and the Advisory Council of the Victoria and Albert Museum from 1960 to 1969, and was twice a trustee of the National Gallery (1962–1968 and 1969–1976), and its first female trustee. She was a member of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts from 1953 to 1978 and president of the English Association for 1955–56. She was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1975.

In 1947 she attended the first meeting of the Mont Pelerin Society.[19] In 1966 she was one of 49 writers who signed a letter appealing to the Soviet Union for the release of Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel from imprisonment based on the "literary and artistic merits" of their work and rejecting the characterisation of it as "propaganda".[20] In her later years she was an admirer of Margaret Thatcher.[21]

 
Wedgwood's grave at Alciston Church in East Sussex

In her last years she suffered from Alzheimer's disease. She died on 9 March 1997 at St Thomas' Hospital in London.[1] She was a lesbian: her partner of almost 70 years, Jacqueline Hope-Wallace (died 2011), who had a career in the British civil service, survived her.[1][22][d] Wedgwood and Hope-Wallace together owned a country house near Polegate in Sussex.[7] Both came from musical families. Wedgwood's father was a cousin of Ralph Vaughan Williams and the dedicatee of his London Symphony.[2] Hope-Wallace's brother Philip was for various periods music and drama critic of The Times, Time and Tide, and the Manchester Guardian. She edited a collection of his writings as Words and Music (1981) for which Wedgwood wrote the introduction.[26] In 1997, Hope-Wallace donated a 1944 oil portrait of Wedgwood by Sir Lawrence Gowing to the National Portrait Gallery, London.[27]

Honours edit

Her biography William the Silent was awarded the 1944 James Tait Black Memorial Prize.[28] The Netherlands awarded her the Order of Orange-Nassau.[2]

She received honorary degrees from the universities of Glasgow and Sheffield and from Smith College, and was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton from 1952 to 1966.[29] She was elected an honorary fellow of her Oxford college, Lady Margaret Hall.[2] In the United States she was elected a member of the Academy of Arts and Letters (1966), a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1973),[30] and the American Philosophical Society.[2] She received the Goethe Medal in 1958.[31]

She was appointed a CBE in 1956, an DBE in 1968, and in 1969, not yet sixty, became the third woman to be appointed a member of the Order of Merit.[e] She termed the last of these honours "excessive".[2]

Writings edit

  • Strafford, 1593–1641 (1935; revised edition: Thomas Wentworth, First Earl of Strafford, 1593–1641: A Revaluation (1961))
  • The Thirty Years War (1938; new edition 1957; with updated bibliography, 1961)
  • Oliver Cromwell (1939; revised 1973)
  • William the Silent (1944)
  • Velvet Studies (1946), a collection of essays
  • Richelieu and the French Monarchy (1949), "Teach Yourself History" series
  • Seventeenth-Century English Literature (1950; 2nd edition 1970)
  • The Last of the Radicals: Josiah Wedgwood, M.P. (1951)
  • The Great Rebellion (two of three volumes completed)
    • The King's Peace, 1637–1641 (1955)
    • The King's War, 1641–1647 (1958)
  • The Trial of Charles I (1964; also published as A Coffin for King Charles and later as A King Condemned: The Trial and Execution of Charles I (Taurus Parke Paperbacks: London, 2011))
  • Poetry and Politics Under the Stuarts (1960), originally Cambridge lectures
  • Truth and Opinion (1960), a collection of essays
  • "Introduction" to Rose Macaulay, They Were Defeated (London: Collins, 1960); reprint of 1932 edition of the historical novel
  • Montrose (1966)
  • The Sense of the Past: Thirteen Studies in the Theory and Practice of History (Collier Books, 1967)
  • The World of Rubens (Time-Life Books, 1973)
  • The Spoils of Time: A Short History of the World, Vol. 1: A World History From the Dawn of Civilization Through the Early Renaissance (1985)
  • History and Hope: The Collected Essays of C.V. Wedgwood (1987); "Most of these essays were originally published in two collections—Velvet studies in 1946 and Truth and opinion in 1960—although the present volume contains a few later pieces"

Translations

  • Carl Brandi, The Emperor Charles V: The Growth and Destiny of a Man and of a World-Empire (In German Brandi, Karl. 1937. Kaiser Karl V: Werden und Schicksal einer Persönlichkeit und eines Weltreiches. München: Bruckmann.)
  • Elias Canetti, Auto-da-Fé (1946; original in German: Die Blendung)

Notes edit

  1. ^ The other women invited along with Wedgwood were Elizabeth Bowen and Rose Macaulay, though Macaulay's was "too mischievous to use", according to Bowen's biographer.[7]
  2. ^ Edmund Crispin in his 1977 crime novel The Glimpses of the Moon uses Wedgwood's open disguise in reference to one of his characters, Father Hattrick, a Roman Catholic priest, who now wears trousers rather than the cassock that was once required. "Under another name," Crispin writes, "he's a sort of male C.V. Wedgwood."[9]
  3. ^ Canetti tells how she sought him out after reading the novel in German. "She was very quick on the uptake, remembered everything, reacted sharply ... someone with whom you could never be bored. But she was never confidant of her effect on others, and always had the feeling of not being taken seriously." He noted as well Wedgwood's interest in Frieda Benedikt [de], his lovestruck admirer who published in English as Anna Sebastian.[16]
  4. ^ Hope-Wallace was appointed a CBE in the 1958 New Year Honours, identified as "Assistant Secretary, National Assistance Board".[23] Hope-Wallace was born Dorothy Jacqueline Hope-Wallace on 29 May 1909. She graduated from Lady Margaret Hall in 1931 with a BA. She worked in the Ministry of Labour and then with the National Assistance Board. She was an Under-Secretary at the Ministry of Labour from 1958 to 1965, and an Under-Secretary at the Ministry of Housing and Local Government from 1965 to 1969. She was Commissioner of the Public Works Loan Board from 1974 to 1978.[24] In a profile of Hope-Wallace in Civil Service Network just after she turned 100, she said: "My brother Philip was a journalist: the Guardian's man on music and plays. And for nearly 70 years I shared a life with a well-known historian called Dame Veronica Wedgwood, in Sussex and London. So that was the entourage that I lived in socially ..."[25]
  5. ^ The women who preceded her in the Order of Merit were Florence Nightingale and Dorothy Hodgkin.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "C. V. Wedgwood, 86, Storyteller of History". The New York Times. 11 March 1997. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Rowse, A.L. (11 March 1997). "Obituary: Dame Veronica Wedgwood". The Independent. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  3. ^ Donnelly, Sue (27 February 2020). "A PhD student at LSE – Dame Cicely Veronica Wedgwood (1910-1997)". LSE History. from the original on 29 March 2020. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  4. ^ Fermor, Patrick Leigh (1977). A Time of Gifts—On Foot to Constantinople: From the Hook of Holland to the Middle Danube. New York Review of Books. p. 268n. ISBN 9781590171653.
  5. ^ a b c d "C.V. Wedgwood". The Economist. 10 March 1997. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  6. ^ Hackett, Francis (30 November 1944). "Books of the Times" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  7. ^ a b c Glendinning, Victoria (1977). Elizabeth Bowen. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 222, 280.
  8. ^ "Cicely Veronica Wedgwood 1910-1997" (PDF). The British Academy.
  9. ^ Crispin, Edmund (1977). The Glimpses of the Moon. New York: Walker. ISBN 9781448206902.
  10. ^ a b c Boyd, Kelly (1999). Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing, volume 2. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn. p. 1288. ISBN 9781884964336.
  11. ^ Steiner, George (1984). George Steiner: A Reader. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 289. ISBN 978-0-19-505068-4.
  12. ^ Berry, Ralph (2004). The Research Project: How to Write It, 5th edition. New York: Routledge. p. 74. ISBN 9780415334457.
  13. ^ Sparks, Karen. "Dame Veronica Wedgwood". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  14. ^ Scholes, Robert E.; et al. (2006) [1966]. The Nature of Narrative: Revised and Expanded. Oxford University Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-19-515175-6.
  15. ^ Donahue, William Collins (2001). The End of Modernism: Elias Canetti's Auto-da-Fé. University of North Carolina Press. pp. xiii, 11. ISBN 9780807875223.
  16. ^ Canetti, Elias (2003). Party in the Blitz: The English Years. New York: New Directions. pp. 16–19, 109–10. ISBN 9780811215008.
  17. ^ Mattingly, Garrett (22 May 1960). "Perspectives on the Past" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  18. ^ Patrick Weil and Nicholas Handler, 'Revocation of Citizenship and Rule of Law: How Judicial Review Defeated Britain’s First Denaturalization Regime' (2018) 36(2) LHR 295, 341.
  19. ^ The road from Mont Pèlerin : the making of the neoliberal thought collective. Philip Mirowski, Dieter Plehwe. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 2009. ISBN 978-0-674-05426-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  20. ^ "Western Writers Appeal to Soviet" (PDF). The New York Times. 1 February 1966. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  21. ^ Preece, Julian (6 February 2004). "The God-monster's version". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  22. ^ Chancellor, Alexander (13 April 2013). "Two encounters". The Spectator. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  23. ^ "Supplement" (PDF). London Gazette. 1 January 1958. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  24. ^ Charles Mosley, ed., Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition, (Wilmington, DE: Burke's Peerage Ltd., 2003), volume 2, 2358
  25. ^ . How to be a Civil Servant. civilservant.org.uk. Archived from the original on 6 October 2013. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  26. ^ Jacqueline Hope-Wallace, ed., Words and Music: A Selection from the Criticism and Occasional Pieces of Philip Hope-Wallace, introduction by C. V. Wedgwood (Harper Collins, 1981)
  27. ^ "Dame Cicely Veronica Wedgwood". Collections. National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  28. ^ "Biography winners". James Tait Black Prizes. University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 November 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  30. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter W" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  31. ^ Uglow, Jennifer S. (1998). The Northeastern Dictionary of Women's Biography, 3rd edition. London: Macmillan. p. 569. ISBN 9781555534219.

wedgwood, dame, cicely, veronica, wedgwood, frhists, july, 1910, march, 1997, english, historian, published, under, name, specializing, history, 17th, century, england, continental, europe, biographies, narrative, histories, said, have, provided, clear, entert. Dame Cicely Veronica Wedgwood OM DBE FBA FRHistS 20 July 1910 9 March 1997 was an English historian who published under the name C V Wedgwood Specializing in the history of 17th century England and continental Europe her biographies and narrative histories are said to have provided a clear entertaining middle ground between popular and scholarly works DameVeronica WedgwoodOM DBE FBA FRHistSWedgwood in 1969 by Godfrey ArgentBornCicely Veronica Wedgwood 1910 07 20 20 July 1910Stocksfield EnglandDied9 March 1997 1997 03 09 aged 86 London EnglandOccupationHistorianNationalityBritishAlma materLady Margaret Hall OxfordPeriod1935 1987Subject17th century EuropeNotable worksThe Thirty Years War 1938 PartnerJacqueline Hope WallaceRelativesSir Ralph Wedgwood father Iris Wedgwood mother John Hamilton Wedgwood brother Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Honours 5 Writings 6 Notes 7 ReferencesEarly life editWedgwood was born in Stocksfield Northumberland on 20 July 1910 She was the only daughter of Sir Ralph Wedgwood Bt a railway executive and his wife Iris Wedgwood nee Pawson a novelist and travel writer Her brother was the politician and industrialist Sir John Wedgwood Veronica Wedgwood was a great great great granddaughter of the potter and abolitionist Josiah Wedgwood 1 Her uncle was the politician Josiah Wedgwood later 1st Baron Wedgwood She was educated at home and then at Norland Place School She earned a First in Classics and Modern History at Lady Margaret Hall Oxford where A L Rowse said she was my first outstanding pupil 2 In 1932 she enrolled for a PhD at the London School of Economics under the supervision of R H Tawney but never completed it 3 Career editWedgwood published her first biography Strafford at the age of 25 and The Thirty Years War her big book covering a large canvas according to Rowse just three years later 2 a work Patrick Leigh Fermor called b y far the best and most exciting book on the whole period 4 She specialised in European history of the 16th and 17th centuries Her work in continental European history included the major study The Thirty Years War 1938 and biographies of William the Silent and Cardinal Richelieu She devoted the greater part of her research to English history especially in the English Civil War Her major works included a biography of Oliver Cromwell and two volumes of a planned trilogy The Great Rebellion which included The King s Peace 1955 and The King s War 1958 She continued the story with The Trial of Charles I 1964 She was known to walk battlefields and experience the same weather and field conditions as the subjects of her histories mindful that Cromwell had no military experience and most participants in the English Civil War were talented amateurs when it came to military manoeuvres 5 The subject was one of great controversy and rival schools of historical interpretations but she held herself apart probably put off by the sheer scholasticism into which the treatment of the subject had degenerated the rudeness with which academics treated each other over it when she herself was always courteous and lady like Instead what was remarkable about Wedgwood s view of the Civil War was the way in which she depicted the sheer confusion of it all the impossibility of co ordinating events in three countries once order from the centre had broken down 2 Of William the Silent 1944 Rowse wrote that she displayed not only a mastery of research but maturity of judgement with a literary capacity not common in academic writing She wrote indeed to be read and not surprisingly the book began for her a long procession of prizes and honours 2 The New York Times singled it out as a landmark Miracles do happen A generation ago the young English woman historian was often tethered to a dry theme until she had nibbled it bald Today she dares much more to select a major subject and praised her scholarship for balancing complex details with human drama Miss Wedgwood has not faltered before the intricacy or magnitude of this checkered struggle and hers is a glowing substantial ingeniously organized book 6 Thirty years after she published a biography of Thomas Wentworth Earl of Strafford she published a much revised version that was considerably more critical of her subject In the earlier version she called him a sincere brave and able man After using a collection of his family s papers that had not previously been available she deemed him greedy and unscrupulous 5 She was well regarded in academic circles and her books were widely read She was also successful as a lecturer and broadcaster In 1953 the BBC invited her to present her impressions of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II 7 a She was a tutor at Somerville College Oxford 8 and she was a Special Lecturer at University College London from 1962 to 1991 2 According to The Economist she had a novelist s talent for entering into the character of the giants of history She published using her initials C V as a nom de plume to disguise her gender aware of prejudice against women as serious historians 5 b She wrote as well about the historian s responsibility to do more than analyse or describe Rather than pose as a disinterested observer she wrote Historians should always draw morals 5 She offered her own alternative to the neatness provided by theory T he whole value of the study of history is for me its delightful undermining of certainty its cumulative insistence of the differences of point of view it is not lack of prejudice which makes for dull history but lack of passion 10 George Steiner complaining that m uch of what passes for history at present is scarcely literate set Wedgwood apart 11 One of the few contemporary historians prepared to defend openly the poetic nature of all historical imagining is C V Wedgwood She fully concedes that all style brings with it the possibility of distortion There is no literary style which may not at some point take away something from the ascertainable outline of truth which it is the task of scholarship to excavate and re establish She acknowledged that contemporary concerns affected her historical assessments In the 1957 introduction to a new release of The Thirty Years War which first appeared in 1938 she wrote I wrote this book in the thirties against the background of depression at home and mounting tension abroad The preoccupations of that unhappy time cast their shadows over its pages 12 She replied to critics of her attention to biography and the role of the individual in history 10 The individual stupendous and beautiful paradox is at once infinitesimal dust and the cause of all things I prefer this overestimate to the opposite method which treats developments as though they were the massive anonymous waves of an inhuman sea or pulverizes the fallible surviving records of human life into the grey dust of statistics Her biographies and narrative histories are said to have provided a clear entertaining middle ground between popular and scholarly works 13 By 1966 her reputation and notoriety were sufficient to allow the authors of a study of The Nature of Narrative to invoke her name in reference to the tradition of historical scholarship medieval traditional poetic narratives contained allusions to verifiable historical events although their history was not such as Tacitus Bede or C V Wedgwood might have written 14 In 1946 she translated Elias Canetti s Die Blendung as Auto da Fe under the author s supervision though a modern scholar who considers Wedgwood s work on it ordinarily quite excellent doubts Canetti reviewed it in detail He suspects she hesitated to present discussions of misogyny and antisemitism quite openly 15 c Her book The Last of the Radicals 1951 was about her uncle Josiah Wedgwood 1st Baron Wedgwood She completed just one volume of her planned Short History of the World 1985 before illness prevented her from continuing the project 1 Her essays many later published in small collections appeared originally in Lady Rhondda s Time and Tide where she held editor posts from 1944 to 1952 and in the Times Literary Supplement The Spectator and other periodicals 10 Garrett Mattingly praised the essays in Truth and Opinion 1960 for displaying or concealing rather but always molded and controlled by that exquisite sense of form in a medium apparently almost formless which is the first rate essayist s most precious gift 17 Personal life editShe was active in numerous societies including the London arm of the International Pen Club in London where she was president from 1951 to 1957 as well as the Society of Authors president 1972 1977 and the London Library She was appointed as the non legal member on the Judicial Committee advising Home Secretary on deprivation of citizenship in 1948 18 She served on the Arts Council from 1958 to 1961 and the Advisory Council of the Victoria and Albert Museum from 1960 to 1969 and was twice a trustee of the National Gallery 1962 1968 and 1969 1976 and its first female trustee She was a member of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts from 1953 to 1978 and president of the English Association for 1955 56 She was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1975 In 1947 she attended the first meeting of the Mont Pelerin Society 19 In 1966 she was one of 49 writers who signed a letter appealing to the Soviet Union for the release of Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel from imprisonment based on the literary and artistic merits of their work and rejecting the characterisation of it as propaganda 20 In her later years she was an admirer of Margaret Thatcher 21 nbsp Wedgwood s grave at Alciston Church in East SussexIn her last years she suffered from Alzheimer s disease She died on 9 March 1997 at St Thomas Hospital in London 1 She was a lesbian her partner of almost 70 years Jacqueline Hope Wallace died 2011 who had a career in the British civil service survived her 1 22 d Wedgwood and Hope Wallace together owned a country house near Polegate in Sussex 7 Both came from musical families Wedgwood s father was a cousin of Ralph Vaughan Williams and the dedicatee of his London Symphony 2 Hope Wallace s brother Philip was for various periods music and drama critic of The Times Time and Tide and the Manchester Guardian She edited a collection of his writings as Words and Music 1981 for which Wedgwood wrote the introduction 26 In 1997 Hope Wallace donated a 1944 oil portrait of Wedgwood by Sir Lawrence Gowing to the National Portrait Gallery London 27 Honours editHer biography William the Silent was awarded the 1944 James Tait Black Memorial Prize 28 The Netherlands awarded her the Order of Orange Nassau 2 She received honorary degrees from the universities of Glasgow and Sheffield and from Smith College and was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton from 1952 to 1966 29 She was elected an honorary fellow of her Oxford college Lady Margaret Hall 2 In the United States she was elected a member of the Academy of Arts and Letters 1966 a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1973 30 and the American Philosophical Society 2 She received the Goethe Medal in 1958 31 She was appointed a CBE in 1956 an DBE in 1968 and in 1969 not yet sixty became the third woman to be appointed a member of the Order of Merit e She termed the last of these honours excessive 2 Writings editStrafford 1593 1641 1935 revised edition Thomas Wentworth First Earl of Strafford 1593 1641 A Revaluation 1961 The Thirty Years War 1938 new edition 1957 with updated bibliography 1961 Oliver Cromwell 1939 revised 1973 William the Silent 1944 Velvet Studies 1946 a collection of essays Richelieu and the French Monarchy 1949 Teach Yourself History series Seventeenth Century English Literature 1950 2nd edition 1970 The Last of the Radicals Josiah Wedgwood M P 1951 The Great Rebellion two of three volumes completed The King s Peace 1637 1641 1955 The King s War 1641 1647 1958 The Trial of Charles I 1964 also published as A Coffin for King Charles and later as A King Condemned The Trial and Execution of Charles I Taurus Parke Paperbacks London 2011 Poetry and Politics Under the Stuarts 1960 originally Cambridge lectures Truth and Opinion 1960 a collection of essays Introduction to Rose Macaulay They Were Defeated London Collins 1960 reprint of 1932 edition of the historical novel Montrose 1966 The Sense of the Past Thirteen Studies in the Theory and Practice of History Collier Books 1967 The World of Rubens Time Life Books 1973 The Spoils of Time A Short History of the World Vol 1 A World History From the Dawn of Civilization Through the Early Renaissance 1985 History and Hope The Collected Essays of C V Wedgwood 1987 Most of these essays were originally published in two collections Velvet studies in 1946 and Truth and opinion in 1960 although the present volume contains a few later pieces Translations Carl Brandi The Emperor Charles V The Growth and Destiny of a Man and of a World Empire In German Brandi Karl 1937 Kaiser Karl V Werden und Schicksal einer Personlichkeit und eines Weltreiches Munchen Bruckmann Elias Canetti Auto da Fe 1946 original in German Die Blendung Notes edit The other women invited along with Wedgwood were Elizabeth Bowen and Rose Macaulay though Macaulay s was too mischievous to use according to Bowen s biographer 7 Edmund Crispin in his 1977 crime novel The Glimpses of the Moon uses Wedgwood s open disguise in reference to one of his characters Father Hattrick a Roman Catholic priest who now wears trousers rather than the cassock that was once required Under another name Crispin writes he s a sort of male C V Wedgwood 9 Canetti tells how she sought him out after reading the novel in German She was very quick on the uptake remembered everything reacted sharply someone with whom you could never be bored But she was never confidant of her effect on others and always had the feeling of not being taken seriously He noted as well Wedgwood s interest in Frieda Benedikt de his lovestruck admirer who published in English as Anna Sebastian 16 Hope Wallace was appointed a CBE in the 1958 New Year Honours identified as Assistant Secretary National Assistance Board 23 Hope Wallace was born Dorothy Jacqueline Hope Wallace on 29 May 1909 She graduated from Lady Margaret Hall in 1931 with a BA She worked in the Ministry of Labour and then with the National Assistance Board She was an Under Secretary at the Ministry of Labour from 1958 to 1965 and an Under Secretary at the Ministry of Housing and Local Government from 1965 to 1969 She was Commissioner of the Public Works Loan Board from 1974 to 1978 24 In a profile of Hope Wallace in Civil Service Network just after she turned 100 she said My brother Philip was a journalist the Guardian s man on music and plays And for nearly 70 years I shared a life with a well known historian called Dame Veronica Wedgwood in Sussex and London So that was the entourage that I lived in socially 25 The women who preceded her in the Order of Merit were Florence Nightingale and Dorothy Hodgkin References edit a b c d C V Wedgwood 86 Storyteller of History The New York Times 11 March 1997 Retrieved 12 April 2013 a b c d e f g h i j Rowse A L 11 March 1997 Obituary Dame Veronica Wedgwood The Independent Retrieved 12 April 2013 Donnelly Sue 27 February 2020 A PhD student at LSE Dame Cicely Veronica Wedgwood 1910 1997 LSE History Archived from the original on 29 March 2020 Retrieved 11 April 2021 Fermor Patrick Leigh 1977 A Time of Gifts On Foot to Constantinople From the Hook of Holland to the Middle Danube New York Review of Books p 268n ISBN 9781590171653 a b c d C V Wedgwood The Economist 10 March 1997 Retrieved 12 April 2013 Hackett Francis 30 November 1944 Books of the Times PDF The New York Times Retrieved 12 April 2013 a b c Glendinning Victoria 1977 Elizabeth Bowen New York Alfred A Knopf pp 222 280 Cicely Veronica Wedgwood 1910 1997 PDF The British Academy Crispin Edmund 1977 The Glimpses of the Moon New York Walker ISBN 9781448206902 a b c Boyd Kelly 1999 Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing volume 2 Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn p 1288 ISBN 9781884964336 Steiner George 1984 George Steiner A Reader New York Oxford University Press p 289 ISBN 978 0 19 505068 4 Berry Ralph 2004 The Research Project How to Write It 5th edition New York Routledge p 74 ISBN 9780415334457 Sparks Karen Dame Veronica Wedgwood Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 12 April 2013 Scholes Robert E et al 2006 1966 The Nature of Narrative Revised and Expanded Oxford University Press p 41 ISBN 978 0 19 515175 6 Donahue William Collins 2001 The End of Modernism Elias Canetti s Auto da Fe University of North Carolina Press pp xiii 11 ISBN 9780807875223 Canetti Elias 2003 Party in the Blitz The English Years New York New Directions pp 16 19 109 10 ISBN 9780811215008 Mattingly Garrett 22 May 1960 Perspectives on the Past PDF The New York Times Retrieved 12 April 2013 Patrick Weil and Nicholas Handler Revocation of Citizenship and Rule of Law How Judicial Review Defeated Britain s First Denaturalization Regime 2018 36 2 LHR 295 341 The road from Mont Pelerin the making of the neoliberal thought collective Philip Mirowski Dieter Plehwe Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 674 05426 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Western Writers Appeal to Soviet PDF The New York Times 1 February 1966 Retrieved 12 April 2013 Preece Julian 6 February 2004 The God monster s version The Guardian Retrieved 12 April 2013 Chancellor Alexander 13 April 2013 Two encounters The Spectator Retrieved 12 April 2013 Supplement PDF London Gazette 1 January 1958 Retrieved 12 April 2013 Charles Mosley ed Burke s Peerage Baronetage amp Knightage 107th edition Wilmington DE Burke s Peerage Ltd 2003 volume 2 2358 Women in the Civil Service How to be a Civil Servant civilservant org uk Archived from the original on 6 October 2013 Retrieved 13 April 2013 Jacqueline Hope Wallace ed Words and Music A Selection from the Criticism and Occasional Pieces of Philip Hope Wallace introduction by C V Wedgwood Harper Collins 1981 Dame Cicely Veronica Wedgwood Collections National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 13 April 2013 Biography winners James Tait Black Prizes University of Edinburgh Retrieved 12 April 2013 Wedgwood Veronica at IAS website Archived from the original on 25 November 2015 Retrieved 9 April 2014 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter W PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 25 July 2014 Uglow Jennifer S 1998 The Northeastern Dictionary of Women s Biography 3rd edition London Macmillan p 569 ISBN 9781555534219 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title C V Wedgwood amp oldid 1183389451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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