Anthony Howe (historian)
This article is about the historian. For the artist, see Anthony Howe.
Anthony Howe is an English historian and Professor of Modern History at the University of East Anglia, a post he has held since 2003.[1] He has previously taught at the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics and Modern History at Oriel College, Oxford.[2]
Howe was educated at Cheltenham Grammar School, Wadham College, Oxford and was a postgraduate student at Nuffield College, Oxford.[3]
Works
- The Cotton Masters, 1830-1860 (Oxford, 1984).
- ‘Towards the ‘hungry forties’: free trade in Britain, c. 1880-1906’, in Eugenio Biagini (ed.), Citizenship and Community. Liberals, Radicalis and Collective Identities in the British Isles. 1865-1931 (Cambridge, 1996), pp. 193–218.
- Free Trade and Liberal England, 1846-1946 (Oxford, 1997).
- ‘Re-Forging Britons: Richard Cobden and France’, in S. Aprile & F. Bensimon (eds.), La France et L'Angleterre an XIXe siècle, pp. 89–104
- ‘Two Faces of British Power: Cobden versus Palmerston’, in David Brown and Miles Taylor (eds.), Palmerston Studies II (Southampton, 2007), pp. 168–92
- ‘Free Trade and Global Order’, in Duncan Bell (ed.), Victorian Visions of Global Order (Cambridge, 2007), pp. 26–46.
- The Letters of Richard Cobden: Volume I: 1815-1847 (Oxford, 2007).
- The Letters of Richard Cobden: Volume II: 1848-1853 (Oxford, 2010).
- ‘British Liberalism and the Legacy of Saint-Simon: The Case of Richard Cobden’, History of Economic Ideas (forthcoming).
Notes
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