Francis Michael Longstreth Thompson

Francis Michael Longstreth Thompson FBA (born 1925) is an English economic and social historian.

The son of Francis Longstreth Thompson, he was educated at Bootham School, York And Queens College, Oxford, taking his PhD in 1956.

He was Reader in Economic History at University College London in 1963. He became Professor of Modern History at Bedford College in 1968, and was from 1977 to 1990 director of the Institute of Historical Research, University of London.[1]

He was president of the Royal Historical Society from 1989 to 1993.[2]


He is best known for English Landed Society in the Nineteenth Century (1963), which made the role of the landed gentry a high-priority topic for agrarian and political history. He also studied urban middle and working classes, and suburbia. He added to the long-standing debate on British class history by new emphasis on "respectability." Thompson argued that it operated across class boundaries and provided a powerful stabilizing counterbalance to the working class upheavals of Victorian society. His model of society contradicted the more commonly employed Marxist assumptions. He opened up a field that has attracted many younger scholars.[3]

Works

References

  1. http://www.britac.ac.uk/fellowship/directory/archive.asp?fellowsID=517
  2. "List of Presidents". Royal Historical Society. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
  3. Christine S. Hallas, "Thompson, F.M.L." in Kelly Boyd, ed. (1999). Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing, vol 2. Taylor & Francis. pp. 1189–90.

Further reading

External links

Academic offices
Preceded by
Gerald Aylmer
President of the Royal Historical Society
19891993
Succeeded by
Sir Rees Davies


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