Acton, John Emerich Edward Dalberg, 1834-1902 (1st Baron Acton and historian)
Dates
- Existence: 1834 - 1902
Biography
John Emerich Edward Dalberg-Acton (1834-1902), 1st Baron Acton, historian, was born in Naples on 10 January 1834. His father was Sir Ferdinand Richard Acton (1801-1837), 7th Baronet, son of John Francis Edward Acton. His mother was Countess Marie Dalberg (d. 1860), heiress to one of the oldest of the German noble houses, who in 1840 married Granville George Leveson-Gower (1815-1891), 2nd Earl Granville. Acton studied in Munich under the church historian Ignaz von Döllinger. In 1859 he became the Liberal M.P. for the Irish constituency of Carlow, and in 1869 he accepted a peerage. During this time, Acton acquired The rambler, and developed it as a liberal Catholic journal dedicated to discussing social, political and theological matters. The journal closed in 1864, and Acton began work on a 'History of the papacy during the last three centuries'. For this purpose he moved to the continent and carried out research in libraries and archives. During 1869-1870, he attended the first Vatican Council in Rome. Acton was forced to abandon his papal history in the late 1870s, largely because of the problems he faced in acquiring the evidence he required in Italy. He turned to a new project, 'The history of freedom', which he worked on while living on the continent. In 1895 he was appointed Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge University. He gave lectures on the French Revolution and modern history, and was chiefly responsible for organising the Cambridge modern history. Acton died at Tegernsee, Bavaria, on 19 June 1902.
Found in 37 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from 1st Baron Acton to John Willis Clark, 28 May 1895
Thanks for information about ceremonial [installation as Regius Professor of Modern History]
Letter from 1st Baron Acton to John Willis Clark, 8 Mar. 1896
Letter of introduction for F. Ehrle, Vatican Librarian, 'one of the most learned men in Rome'
Letter from 1st Baron Acton to Mrs Clark, 5 Feb. 1880-5 Feb. 1900 (Circa. No year given)
Acceptance
Letter from 1st Baron Acton to Mrs Clark, 24 Jan. 1896
Declining invitation; Parliament meets then
Letter from John Acton, 1st Lord Acton to Stephen Paget (1855-1926) [Tegernsee], 29 Aug. 1900
Glad to know from J.J. Thomson that Paget is writing the life of his father [Sir James Paget (1814-99), surgeon]; 'I sought every opportunity of conversing with him, but we exchanged only very few letters'; reminiscences; Lord Houghton's opposition to Paget's father's proposed membership of a club; suggested enemies: Sir W. Fergusson, Cooper, Lawrence, Liston, Syme; Paget did not think much of Gull
Lord Acton (1834-1902): letters to Reginald Lane Poole (1857-1939)
Mandell Creighton: Correspondence with Lord Acton and Academic Papers
Photograph of a painting of Lord Acton's Wedding, 1865 (circa)
In Schloss Chapel, St. Martin, Upper Austria. The wedding took place 1 August 1865.
Sir Adolphus William Ward: Correspondence
Correspondence, mainly concerning the Cambridge Modern History series of volumes. Letters are addressed to Ward unless otherwise stated.
Sir Edmund Maunde Thompson: Correspondence to 1st Lord Acton, 1900
Artificial collection of single item or small collection accessions. Mainly correspondence but includes other papers.
Sir Herbert Butterfield: Papers
The papers described in this catalogue date chiefly from the end of the Second World War to the 1970s; from the beginning of this period Butterfield was assisted in his University and college duties by a secretary. The collection documents almost all aspects of his academic life and writings, and provides a record of the wider development of historical studies over the course of his career.
Sir Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant Duff: Letter to Lord Acton, 1900
Artificial collection of single item or small collection accessions. Mainly correspondence but includes other papers.
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