Angus Calder
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 16 years ago |
Date of birth | February 5,1942 |
Zodiac sign | Aquarius |
Born | Sutton |
United Kingdom | |
Date of died | June 5,2008 |
Died | Edinburgh |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Jenni Calder |
Parents | Peter Ritchie Calder |
Mabel Jane Forbes McKail | |
Ritchie Calder | |
Job | Screenwriter |
Historian | |
Educator | |
Book editor | |
Education | King's College, Cambridge |
University of Sussex | |
Children | Gideon Ritchie-Calder |
Rachel Ritchie-Calder | |
Gowan Ritchie-Calder | |
Douglas Ritchie-Calder | |
Siblings | Nigel Calder |
Allan Calder | |
Fiona Rudd | |
Isla Calder | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 527389 |
The People's War
The myth of the Blitz
Revolutionary empire
Revolving culture
Gods, mongrels, and demons
Disasters and Heroes
Scotlands of the mind
Byron and Scotland Radical or Dandy?
Waking in Waikato
Russia discovered
Colours of Grief
Sun Behind the Castle
The Souls of the Dead Are Taking the Best Seats
David Livingstone and the Victorian Encounter with Africa
T S Eliot Calder
Open Guides To Literature: Byron
Dipa's Bowl
Horace in Tollcross: Eftir Some Odes of Q. H. Flaccus
Wars
Mass Observation
Byron
Women and Poetry
History of Britain in the 20th Century
Scott
Poor Relations and Rich Publishers
Romantic Poetry
The myth of the Blitz
Revolutionary empire
Revolving culture
Gods, mongrels, and demons
Disasters and Heroes
Scotlands of the mind
Byron and Scotland Radical or Dandy?
Waking in Waikato
Russia discovered
Colours of Grief
Sun Behind the Castle
The Souls of the Dead Are Taking the Best Seats
David Livingstone and the Victorian Encounter with Africa
T S Eliot Calder
Open Guides To Literature: Byron
Dipa's Bowl
Horace in Tollcross: Eftir Some Odes of Q. H. Flaccus
Wars
Mass Observation
Byron
Women and Poetry
History of Britain in the 20th Century
Scott
Poor Relations and Rich Publishers
Romantic Poetry
Angus Calder Life story
Angus Lindsay Ritchie Calder was a Scottish writer, historian, and poet. Initially studying English literature, he became increasingly interested in political history and wrote a landmark study on Britain during the Second World War in 1969 entitled The People's War.