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Sir Charles Alexander Petrie, 3rd Baronet (28
September 1895 - 13 December 1977) was a popular historian. Of Irish lineage, but
born in Liverpool, he
succeeded to the family baronetcy in 1927.
He is known for his interest in monarchy, royalism and Jacobitism, and
particularly for his 1926 essay in counterfactual
history, If: A Jacobite Fantasy.
In the 1930s he flirted with the far right. He attended the 1932 Volta
Conference (of fascists and sympathisers). His 1933 book
Mussolini, laudatory on the whole, was
published in German in Leipzig. He joined in 1934 the January Club of
supporters of Oswald
Mosley. At the same time he remained publicly hostile towards
Nazism, very consistently.[1]
He became the literary editor of the generally conservative New
English Review. He was a supporter (with some subsequent
reservations) of General Franco; with Douglas Francis
Jerrold, the NER's editor, he formed in 1937 a group
concerned to put the Nationalist case on the fighting in the Spanish Civil
War.
During the late 1930s he was a supporter of Neville
Chamberlain, though subsequently he was vocal for Winston
Churchill. In 1941 he tried to become a Conservative Party
candidate, in Dorset South. He was passed over; according to Andrew Roberts in
Eminent Churchillians, this was because Petrie was too
closely identified with appeasement.
Works
- The History of Government (1929)
- The Jacobite Movement (1932)
- Monarchy (1933)
- The Stuart Pretenders-A History of The Jacobite Movement,
1688-1807 (1933)
- Mussolini (Leipzig, 1933) in German The History of Spain (1934)
with Louis Bertrand
- Spain (1934)
- The Letters Speeches and Proclamations of King Charles 1
(1935)
- The Four Georges A Revaluation of the Period From 1714-1830
(1935)
- William Pitt (1935)
- Walter Long and his times (1936)
- Lords of the Inland Sea: A Study of the Mediterranean Powers
(1937)
- Bolingbroke (1937)
- The Stuarts (1937)
- The Chamberlain tradition (Right Book Club 1938)
- The Life and Letters of The Right Hon. Sir Austen Chamberlain
K.G., P.C., M.P: 2 volumes (1939/1940)
- Joseph Chamberlain (1940)
- Louis XIV (1940)
- Twenty years' armistice-and after : British foreign policy
since 1918 (Right Book Club 1940)
- When Britain Saved Europe (1941)
- George Canning (1946)
- Diplomatic history, 1713-1933 (1947)
- The Private Diaries (March 1940 to January 1941) of Paul
Baudouin (1948) translator
- Earlier diplomatic history, 1492-1713 (1949)
- The Jacobite Movement. The First Phase 1688-1716. London: Eyre,
1948
- The Jacobite Movement. The Last Phase, 1716-1807.(1950)
- Chapters of Life (1950)
- The Duke of Berwick and His Son; Some Unpublished Letters and
Papers (1951)
- Monarchy in the Twentieth Century (1952)
- The Marshal Duke of Berwick ; The Picture of an Age
(1953)
- Lord Liverpool and his Times (1954)
- The Carlton Club (1955)
- Wellington (1956)
- The powers behind the Prime Ministers (1958)
- The Jacobite Movement (1958) revision
- Daniel O'Conor Sligo: His Family and His Times (1958)
- The Spanish Royal House (1958)
- The Victorians (1960)
- The Modern British Monarchy (1961)
- King Alfonso XIII and His Age (1963)
- Philip II of Spain (1963)
- Scenes of Edwardian Life (1965)
- Don John of Austria (1967)
- Great Beginnings In The Age Of Queen Victoria (1967)
- The Letters of King Charles I (1968)
- The Drift to World War, 1900-1914 (1968)
- King Charles III of Spain: An Enlightened Despot (1971)
- A Historian Looks at His World (1972)
- The Great Tyrconnel: A Chapter in Anglo-Irish Relations
(1972)
- King Charles, Prince Rupert, and the Civil War: from original
letters (1974)
References
- Kidd, Charles, Williamson, David (editors). Debrett's
Peerage and Baronetage (1990 edition). New York: St Martin's
Press, 1990.
- Leigh Rayment's Peerage Page
Notes
- ^
Richard Griffiths, Fellow Travellers of the Right (1980),
p. 41.