Llewellyn Woodward
Sir (Ernest) Llewellyn Woodward (1890–1971) was a British historian. He was educated at Merchant Taylors' School and Corpus Christi College, Oxford and after the First World War became a Lecturer in Modern History and fellow of All Souls College from 1919–1944 and a Fellow at New College from 1922–1939. Later he was Montague Burton Professor of International Relations (1944–1947) and then Professor of Modern History at Oxford. He later taught at Princeton University in the United States (1951–1962). His scope was impressively wide, his first publication being on the late Roman Empire whilst on sick leave from service in the First World War but his most famous works being on the First World War. He wrote The Age of Reform in the Oxford History of England.
Bibliography
- Woodward, Ernest Llewellyn. Great Britain and the German navy (Clarendon Press, 1935)
- Woodward, Ernest Llewellyn. The age of reform, 1815–1870 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1938)
- Woodward, Ernest Llewellyn. The Study of International Relations at a University: An Inaugural Lecture (Clarendon Press, 1945)
- Woodward, Ernest Llewellyn. British foreign policy in the Second World War HM Stationery Office, 1962.
- Woodward, Llewellyn. "The study of contemporary history." Journal of Contemporary History (1966) 1#1 pp: 1-13. in JSTOR
- Woodward, Ernest Llewellyn. Great Britain and the War of 1914–1918 (Beacon Press, 1970)