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Edward Augustus Freeman

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Edward Augustus Freeman
Birthday
BirthplaceMetchley Abbey, Harborne, England
Died
NationalityBritish
Occupation
Historian
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Freeman, Edward Augustus

 

Born Aug. 2, 1823, in Har-borne, Staffordshire; died Mar. 16, 1892, in Alicante, Spain. English historian. Professor at Oxford University (from 1884).

A liberal in his political views, Freeman was one of the leading representatives of that political trend in English historiography which reduced the problems of historical science primarily to the study of political history. Freeman set forth his methodological principles in Comparative Politics and The Unity of History (1874; Russian translation, 1880) and Methods of Historical Study (1886; Russian translation, 1893). He was the author of works on the history of Greece and Italy and of English medieval art. His Historical Geography of Europe (vols. 1–2, 1881–82; Russian translation, 1892) was the first of its type to be published.

Freeman’s best-known works deal with the medieval history of England. Modernizing the past, Freeman adopted the theory of the prevalence of Germanic institutions and attempted to prove that all the so-called free institutions of English society had existed in the Anglo-Saxon period. Consequently all the succeeding history of England down to the Glorious Revolution of 1688–89 is presented in his works as a gradual restoration of the ancient liberties that had been lost, as he supposed, as a result of the Norman Conquest.

WORKS

A History of the Norman Conquest of England, vols. 1–6. Oxford, 1867–79.
The Reign of William Rufus, vols. 1–2. Oxford, 1882.
In Russian translation:
Razvitie angliiskoi konstitutsiis drevneishikh vremen. Moscow, 1905.

REFERENCE

Gutnova, E. V. Istoriografiia istorii srednikh vekhov. Moscow, 1974. (See Index of Names.)
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive
The first held that "history is past politics", a dictum promulgated by the British historian Edward Augustus Freeman and reverently inscribed on the wall of the Historical Seminary at Johns Hopkins University, where many of those pioneering scholars were trained.
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