(Redirected from Sir Charles William Chadwick Oman)'Sir Charles William Chadwick Oman' (
January 12 1860 –
June 23 1946) was a notable
British military historian of the early
20th century. His reconstructions of medieval battles from the fragmentary and distorted accounts left by chroniclers were pioneering. His style is an invigorating mixture of historical accuracy and emotional highlights, and it makes his narratives, though founded on deep research, often read as smoothly as fiction, especially in his ''History of the Peninsular War''. Occasionally, his interpretations have been challenged, especially his widely copied thesis that British troops defeated their Napoleonic opponents by firepower alone.
Paddy Griffiths, among modern historians, claims the British infantry's discipline and willingness to attack were equally important.
He was born in
India, the son of a British planter, and was educated at
Oxford University, where he studied under
William Stubbs. In 1881 he was elected to a Prize Fellowship at
All Souls College, where he would remain for the rest of his career.
He was elected to
Chichele Professor of
modern history at Oxford in
1905, in succession to
Montagu Burrows. He was also elected
FBA that year, serving as President of the Royal Historical and Numismatic societies, and of the Royal Archaeological Institute.
His academic career was interrupted by the
First World War, during which he was employed by the government Press Bureau and
Foreign Office.
Oman was a
Conservative member of
Parliament for the
University of Oxford constituency from
1919 to
1935, and was
knighted in
1920.
He became an honorary fellow of
New College in
1936 and received the
honorary degrees of
DCL (Oxford,
1926) and
LL.D (
Edinburgh,
1911 and
Cambridge,
1927). He died at
Oxford.
Two of his children became authors. Son Charles wrote several volumes on British silverware and similar housewares. Daughter
Carola was notable for her biographies, especially that of
Nelson.
Works
★ ''The Art of War in the
Middle Ages'' (1885)
★ "The Anglo-Norman and Angevin Administrative System (1100-1265)", in ''Essays Introductory to the Study of English Constitutional History'' (1887)
★ ''A History of
Greece From the Earliest Times to the Death of Alexander the Great'' (1888; 7th ed., 1900)
★ ''Warwick the Kingmaker'' (1891)
★ ''The Story of the Byzantine Empire'' (1892)
★ ''The
Dark Ages 476-918'', Period I of ''Periods of European History'' (1893; 5th ed. 1905)
★ ''A History of
England'' (1895; 2nd ed. 1919)
★ ''A History of the Art of War in the
Middle Ages, Vol. I: A.D. 378-1278'' (1898; 2nd ed. 1924)
★ ''A History of the Art of War in the
Middle Ages, Vol. II: A.D. 1278-1485'' (1898; 2nd ed. 1924)
★ "Alfred as a Warrior", in ''Alfred The Great'', Alfred Bowker, ed. (1899)
★ ''England in the Nineteenth Century'' (1900)
★ ''History of the
Peninsular War, Vol. I: 1807-1809'' (1902)
★ ''Seven Roman Statesmen of the Later Roman Republic'' (1902)
★ ''England and the
Hundred Years War, 1327-1485 A.D.'' (1903?), No. III of ''The Oxford Manuals of English History'', Charles Oman, ed.
★ ''History of the
Peninsular War, Vol. II: Jan. 1809-Sep. 1809'' (1903)
★ "The
Peninsular War, 1808-14", in ''The Cambridge Modern History'', Vol. IX, ''Napoleon'' (1906)
★ "The
Hundred Days, 1815", in ''The Cambridge Modern History'', Vol. IX, ''Napoleon'' (1906)
★ "Inaugural lecture on the study of history" (1906?), in ''Oxford Lectures On University Studies, 1906-1921'' (1924)
★ ''
The Great Revolt of 1381'' (1906)
★ ''From the Accession of Richard II. to the Death of Richard III. (1377-1485)'', Vol. IV of ''The Political History of
England'' (1906)
★ ''History of the
Peninsular War, Vol. III: Sep. 1809-Dec. 1810'' (1908)
★ ''A History of
England Before the
Norman Conquest'' (1910; 8th ed. 1937), Vol. I of ''A History of
England in Seven Volumes'' (1904-), Charles Oman, ed.
★ ''History of the
Peninsular War, Vol. IV: Dec. 1810-Dec. 1811'' (1911)
★ ''
Wellington's Army, 1809-1814'' (1912)
★ ''History of the
Peninsular War, Vol. V: Oct. 1811-Aug. 1812'' (1914)
★ ''The Outbreak of the War of 1914-18: A Narrative Based Mainly on British Official Documents'' (1919)
★ ''History of the
Peninsular War, Vol. VI: Sep. 1812-Aug. 1813'' (1922)
★ ''The Unfortunate Colonel Despard & Other Studies'' (1922)
★ ''British Castles'' (1926)
★ "The Duke of
Wellington", in ''Political Principles of Some Notable Prime Ministers of the Nineteenth Century'', Fossey John Cobb Hearnshaw, ed. (1926)
★ ''Studies in the Napoleonic Wars'' (1929)
★ ''History of the
Peninsular War, Vol. VII: Aug. 1813-Apr. 1814'' (1930)
★ ''The Coinage of
England'' (1931)
★ ''Things I Have Seen'' (1933)
★ "The Necessity for the Reformation" (1933) (public lecture)
★ ''A History of the Art of War in the
Sixteenth Century'' (1937)
★ ''The
Sixteenth Century'' (1937)
★ ''On the Writing of History'' (1939)
★ ''Memories of Victorian Oxford and of Some Early Years'' (1941)
★ ''The Lyons Mail'' (1945)