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Beloff, Max, 1913-1999

LC control no.n 50007146
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingBeloff, Max, 1913-1999
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Variant(s)Beloff, Max Beloff, Baron, 1913-
Belof, Maḳs, Baron, 1913-1999
Beloff, Lord, 1913-1999
Associated countryGreat Britain
Associated placeOxford, England Buckingham, England
Birth date1913-07-02
Death date1999-03-22
Place of birthLondon, England
Place of deathLondon, England
Field of activityHistory Political science
AffiliationAll Souls College (University of Oxford) Nuffield College British Academy
University College of Buckingham
Profession or occupationHistorians Political scientists College teachers
Found inHis Public order and popular disturbances, 1660-1714, 1938: title page (Max Beloff)
The United States and the unity of Europe, 1963: title page (Max Beloff)
His The role of the Palestine Mandate in the period of Britain's imperial decline, 1981?: t.p. (Max Beloff) p. 4 of cover (Maḳs Belof)
His Britain and European union, 1996: CIP t.p. (Lord Beloff) galley (lists author's works; pref. signed at All Souls College, Oxford)
Whitaker's almanack, 1995: p. 162 (under life peers, barons: created 1981: Beloff, Max Beloff; FBA; b. 1913)
WW, 1995 (under Beloff, Baron, cr. 1981 (life peer), of Wolvercote in County of Oxfordshire: Max Beloff; kt. 1980; MA, DLitt. (Oxon); FBA, 1973; FRHistS; FRSA; b. 2 July 1913)
Oxford dictionary of national biography online, viewed September 5, 2013 (Beloff, Max, Baron Beloff (1913-1999), historian, was born on 2 July 1913 in London; went to Corpus Christi College, Oxford, as a scholar and graduated with first-class honours in modern history in 1935; in 1937 became a junior research fellow at Corpus Christi College; in 1939 was appointed an assistant lecturer in history at the University of Manchester, specializing in seventeenth-century history; in 1946 he returned to Oxford as Nuffield reader in the comparative study of institutions, holding a fellowship at Nuffield College from 1947; in 1957 he was elected Gladstone Professor of Government and Public Administration, with a fellowship at All Souls College; in 1974 he abandoned Oxford to become the first principal of the University College of Buckingham; died at St Thomas's Hospital, Lambeth, London, on 22 March 1999)
Associated languageeng