Trevor-Roper was ridiculed in the press, perhaps more than he would have been had he not had a reputation for confrontation. He had public feuds with writer Evelyn Waugh and historian Arnold Toynbee.
Waugh, who had argued with him over religion, later wrote that Trevor-Roper’s appointment to the Regius history chair
“showed malice to the church.”
Trevor-Roper “has never suffered fools gladly, never tempered intellectual disdain with feigned civility, never pulled his literary punches,” The
Observer wrote in 1982. It quoted his longtime friend, the philospher A.J.
Ayer, as saying of the young
Trevor-Roper, “Some might think him lacking in charity.”
A.L. Rowse, the eminent historian of the Elizabethan period and himself a famously prickly academic, described Trevor-Roper “our most riveting historical essayist.”
He went on in a less flattering vein:
“Brightness, briskness illuminate the pages, but there are no shadows, no subtlety, not much perception of character, no pathos or insight into the soul or human suffering. Plenty of wit and cynical observations; no sense of the tragedy — or the poetry — of history.”
Born Jan. 15, 1914 in Glanton, northern
England, the son of a doctor, Hugh Redwald
Trevor-Roper earned a double first-class degree at Christ Church College,
Oxford.
He made an impressive debut as a historian in 1940 with publication of a biography of Archbishop Laud, the powerful 17th century Archbishop of
Canterbury who suppressed Calvinism and
Puritanism.
After the war he returned to Oxford as a fellow of Christ Church college until
1957, and fellow of Oriel College from
1957 to 1980.
On retirement from the Regius professorship he moved to the University of Cambridge where he was master of
Peterhouse until 1987. While there he made headlines with a struggle to remove a college fellow with whom he had a personal conflict.
In 1954 he married Lady Alexandra
Howard-Johnstone. They had no children, but Lady Alexandra, who died in
1997, had a son and daughter from a previous marriage. Trevor-Roper is survived by his three step-children.