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Edwyn Bevan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edwyn Robert Bevan OBE, FBA (15 February 1870 in London – 18 October 1943 in London[1]) was a versatile British philosopher and historian of the Hellenistic world.

Life

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Edwyn Robert Bevan was the fourteenth of sixteen children of Robert Cooper Lee Bevan, a partner in Barclays Bank, and his second wife Emma Frances Shuttleworth, daughter of Philip Nicholas Shuttleworth, Bishop of Chichester. He was educated at Monkton Combe School and at New College, Oxford.[2]

Bevan held an academic position at King's College London as Lecturer in Hellenistic History and Literature.[3] The Arabist Anthony Ashley Bevan was his brother, the conspiracy theorist Nesta Helen Webster was his youngest sister and the artist Robert Polhill Bevan a cousin.

He married Mary Waldegrave, daughter of Granville Waldegrave, 3rd Baron Radstock in 1896 and they had two daughters, Christina (born March 1897, died 1981) and Anne (born March 1898,died 1983).[4]

Bevan's name is given in a list of staff at Wellington House, Britain's War Propaganda Bureau, in a report from February 1916. His role was "Reader & Reporter German papers"[5]

Bevan was awarded an honorary doctorate from St. Andrews in 1922 and an honorary D.Litt. from Oxford in 1923. In 1942 he became a Fellow of the British Academy.

Autochromes of Christina

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A series of early colour photographs Mervyn O'Gorman took in 1913 of Bevan's oldest daughter Christina Elizabeth Frances Bevan dressed in red[6] were included in the Drawn by Light exhibition in 2015 by the National Science and Media Museum and gained press and social media attention.[7]

Works

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References

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  1. ^ Gifford Lecture Series – Biography – Edwyn Bevan at www.giffordlectures.org
  2. ^ Monkton Combe School Register 1868-1964 (38th ed.). Bath: Monkton Combe School. 1965.
  3. ^ "King's College London - People". Archived from the original on 6 May 2011.
  4. ^ "Person Page - 64307". The Peerage.
  5. ^ M. L. Saunders, "Wellington House and British propaganda during the First World War", in: The Historical Journal, Vol. 18, No. 1 (Mar., 1975), pp.119-146; see Appendix A, p.144.
  6. ^ D’Ascenzi, Giovanna (22 June 2015). "La ragazza dell'Autochrome". Internazionale (in Italian). Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  7. ^ "Mervyn O'Gorman's 'Christina': How the girl in red from a 1913 photo became a social media starlet". National Science and Media Museum. 20 May 2015.
  8. ^ "Review of Jerusalem under the High Priests: Five Lectures on the Period between Nehemiah and the New Testament by Edwyn Bevan". The Athenaeum (4044): 522. 29 April 1905.
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