LC control no. | n 50007146 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Beloff, Max, 1913-1999 |
Variant(s) | Beloff, Max Beloff, Baron, 1913- Belof, Maḳs, Baron, 1913-1999 Beloff, Lord, 1913-1999 |
Associated country | Great Britain |
Associated place | Oxford, England Buckingham, England |
Birth date | 1913-07-02 |
Death date | 1999-03-22 |
Place of birth | London, England |
Place of death | London, England |
Field of activity | History Political science |
Affiliation | All Souls College (University of Oxford) Nuffield College British Academy University College of Buckingham |
Profession or occupation | Historians Political scientists College teachers |
Found in | His 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 language | eng |