Rule Britannia?

Michael Haykin  |  Features  |  history
Date posted:  1 Sep 2019
Share Add       
Rule Britannia?

Last night of the Proms | photo: BBC

Remembering the life of H M Gwatkin and the British Empire

The name of Henry Melvill Gwatkin (1844–1916) has long been a familiar one through his standard examination of the Arian heresy, Studies of Arianism (1882), which remains a classical study of this ancient heresy.

Gwatkin was rendered deaf as a young boy by an attack of scarlet fever, but that does not seem to have curbed his intellectual development. He had a love for history from an early age and in time developed that requisite for good historical scholarship, accuracy, which, Glover recalls, was ‘always his passion’.

Share
< Previous article| Features| Next article >
Read more articles by Michael Haykin >>
Comment
VE Day 80 years on: A lasting victory?

VE Day 80 years on: A lasting victory?

After the battle of Waterloo (June 18, 1815), Arthur Wellesley, the Anglo-Irish 1st Duke of Wellington and the commander-in-chief of …

Features
The age of the dilettante

The age of the dilettante

We live in the age of the dilettante, when everyone’s opinion is as good as everyone else’s. The obvious problem …

New here?

Register and get three free articles each month!

Register

Subscribe

Enjoy our monthly paper and full online access from just £18/year

Find out more