Max Beloff, Baron Beloff

Max Beloff, Baron Beloff (2 July 1913 – 22 March 1999) was a British historian and Conservative peer. From 1974 to 1979 he was principal of the University College of Buckingham, now the University of Buckingham.

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Early life

Beloff was born on 2 July 1913 at 21 York House, Fieldway Crescent, Islington, London and was the oldest child of a Jewish family who had moved to England in 1903 from Russia.[1] He was the elder son in a family of five children of merchant Simon Beloff and his wife Marie. His sister Anne would later marry German-born Nobel Prize winning biochemist Ernst Boris Chain in 1948. The young Beloff was educated at St Paul's School, and then studied Modern History at Corpus Christi College, Oxford where he graduated with first-class honours. (Scholar; MA; Honorary Fellow, 1993).

Political views

In his 1992 autobiographical work An Historian in the Twentieth Century Beloff discusses his political journey. He had been at school a Conservative, and was then attracted to socialism once at university, before becoming a liberal after the Second World War. In the debate about educational standards in the 1960s he found the Labour government hostile to his idea of a university outside the state-financed framework, and felt the Liberals were 'moving increasingly to the left. This inclined him to join the Conservative Party upon his retirement in 1979.

Career

He became governor of the University of Haifa, and was elevated to a life peerage with the title Baron Beloff, of Wolvercote in the County of Oxfordshire in 1981. After his death the University of Buckingham established 'The Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty' in January 2005.

Works

Works edited by Beloff include:

References

  1. ^ The Times, 24 March 1999, p23

External links