Veronica Wedgwood
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Dame (Cicely) Veronica Wedgwood OM DBE (July 20, 1910 – 9 March 1997) was an English historian.
Born in Northumberland, she was educated at Norland Place School and later Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, and became a specialist in the English Civil War and early 17th century history. Well regarded in academic circles, her books are widely read, and she was also successful as a lecturer and broadcaster.
She was the only daughter of Sir Ralph Wedgwood and his wife Iris Veronica Pawson. She was a great-great-great-granddaughter of the potter Josiah Wedgwood. She had a brother, Sir John Wedgwood. Her book The Last of the Radicals (1951), was about her uncle Josiah Wedgwood, 1st Baron Wedgwood.
She was created a DBE in 1968, and in 1969 became only the third woman to be appointed a member of the British Order of Merit. Her biography William the Silent was awarded the 1944 James Tait Black Memorial Prize.
[edit] Bibliography
- Strafford biography of Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford was published in 1935.
- The Thirty Years' War (1938)
- Oliver Cromwell (1939)
- William the Silent (1944)
- Velvet Studies
- Richelieu and the French Monarchy. (1962)
- English Literature in the Seventeenth Century
- The Last of the Radicals
- Montrose (1966)
- Truth and Opinion
- The King's Peace (1955)
- The King's War (1958)
- Poetry and Politics Under the Stuarts (1960)
- The Spoils of Time: A Short History of the World [1]
- The Trial of Charles I (also publised as A Coffin for King Charles) (1964) [2]
- Wedgwood also wrote the 1960 introduction to Rose Macaulay's They were Defeated[3]
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Additional Bibliography detail taken from a copy of The Spoils of Time which was first published by William Collins (UK) in 1984, and published also by Book Club Associates.
- ^ (Biographical details taken from a copy of The Trial of Charles I published by Collins (UK)
- ^ First published by Collins London in 1932, and reset and reprinted in later years
[edit] External links
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