FACTOID # 24: You're 66 times more likely to be prosecuted in the USA than in France
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

SEARCH ALL

FACTS & STATISTICS    Advanced view

Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 

 

(* = Graphable)

 

 


Encyclopedia > Conrad Russell
Enlarge
Lord Russell

Conrad Sebastian Robert Russell, 5th Earl Russell (15 April 193714 October 2004) was a British historian and politician. He was a son of the philosopher and mathematician Bertrand Russell, and a great-grandson of the 19th-century British Whig Prime Minister Lord John Russell.


Educated at Eton and Merton College, Oxford, Conrad Russell was one of the world's leading authorities on 17th-century British history, having extensively written and lectured on parliamentary struggles of the period. Russell was also a passionate advocate of liberalism, from a long family line of distinguished liberals.

Contents

Academic career

Russell was a prominent historian on the origins of the English Civil War. His major works include Crisis of Parliaments: English history 1509-1660 (1971), Origins of the English Civil War (edited, 1973), Parliaments and English politics, 1621-1629 (1979), Unrevolutionary England, 1603-1642 (1990), and Fall of the British monarchies, 1637-1642 (1991). Russell argued that the English civil war was much less a result of longterm constitutional conflicts than had previously been thought, and that its origins are to be sought rather in the immediate years preceding the outbreak of war in 1642.


He was Lecturer (and later Reader) in History at Bedford College, University of London (now part of Royal Holloway), 1960-1979; Professor of History at Yale University, USA, 1979-1984; Astor Professor of British History at University College London, 1984-1990; and Professor of British History at King's College London from 1990 to his retirement in 2003.


Political career

As a young man, Conrad Russell's political allegiance varied between the Labour Party and the then very weak Liberals. He stood as the Labour candidate in Paddington South in the 1966 general election, but failed to win the seat from the Conservatives.


He succeeded to the title of the 5th Earl Russell on the death of his half brother, John Conrad Russell, in 1987. He was the first parliamentarian to take his seat as a Liberal Democrat, shortly after the party was formed in 1988 from a merger of the Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party.


Russell was at various times his party's spokesman on home affairs, youth affairs, and work and pensions.


In 1999, all but 92 hereditary peers were removed from the House of Lords. Lord Russell was elected at the top of his party's list of hereditary peers to retain their seats, though he has consistently argued in favour of abolishing the Lords completely, and replacing it with an elected senate.


He was a frequent contributor to debates, much respected on all sides of the house, and well known for sprinkling his speeches with historical analogies. In 1996, he was awarded the Highland Park/Spectator Peer of the Year award.


He was vice-president of the Liberal Democrat Youth and Students 1993-1994 and honorary president of the Liberal Democrat History Group 1998-2004.


Books

Published works include:

  • The Crisis of Parliaments 1603-1660 (1971)
  • The Causes of the English Civil War (1990)
  • The fall of the British Monarchies (1991)
  • An Intelligent Person's Guide to Liberalism (1999)

External links

  • LibDem website (http://www.libdems.org.uk/index.cfm/page.whois/section.people/wid.206/wgroup.peer)
  • Guardian obituary (http://education.guardian.co.uk/obituary/story/0,,1328128,00.html)

Succession


Preceded by:
John Conrad Russell
Earl Russell
Succeeded by:
Nicholas Lyulph Russell



  Results from FactBites:
 
What You Can Get Away With: Conrad Russell (1620 words)
I was very fortunate as a "scholarship boy" to be acquainted with Conrad Russell at Oxford in the late 1950s and often had dinner with him.
Conrad was always enteretaining and regaled all with his wit and insight.
Conrad was a delightful man whose career seemed fully to fulfil his wonderful early promise.
Telegraph | News | Professor the Earl Russell (425 words)
Professor the 5th Earl Russell, who died yesterday aged 67, held the Chair of British History at King's College, London, from 1990 to 2002 and was a leading revisionist historian of the English Civil War; during the 1990s he became a vocal and effective spokesman for the Liberal Democrats in the House of Lords.
Russell rejected those conventional interpretations of the Civil War which saw it as a clash between theories of the Divine Right of Kings and of parliamentary supremacy.
Russell was a flamboyant figure, with a fine head of unruly hair, an ever-present cigarette and a precise, donnish voice.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms, 1022, m