Donald Southgate (historian)

Donald Southgate (31 October 1924 – 12 February 2005) was a British historian of nineteenth century British political history.

He studied for his PhD at Christ Church, Oxford, where he was also president of the Conservative Association. He then taught at Exeter University, Rhodes University in South Africa, Glasgow University and Queen's College, Dundee. He was appointed reader at Queen's College in 1968 and was dean of the faculty of arts during 1976–77.[1]

Works

  • The Passing of the Whigs, 1832–1886 (London: Macmillan, 1962).
  • ‘The Most English Minister...’ The Policies and Politics of Palmerston (London: Macmillan, 1966).
  • (editor), The Conservative Leadership, 1832–1932 (London: Macmillan, 1974).
  • University Education in Dundee: A Cenetary History (Edinburgh: Published for the University of Dundee by Edinburgh University Press, 1982). ISBN 0852244347

Notes

  1. ‘Lives in Brief’, The Times (27 April 2005), p. 66.
gollark: Here's the script it tries to run.
gollark: However, I *did* run `strings` over them, and they contain what looks like obfuscated data of some sort, HTTP request text which seems to be for spreading the exploit to other stuff, and also seemingly random spammy strings which look like edgy teenagers added them.
gollark: I don't know exactly, reverse-engineering is hard.
gollark: That shell script just tries to download and run architecture-specific binaries.
gollark: I actually looked at the file there, it was a minor rabbit hole.
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