C.V. Wedgwood
AWKWARDLY for C.V. Wedgwood, she lived some hundreds of years after the English civil war (1642-48), an event in which she was passionately interested. Describing how the balance of power shifted from the monarch to Parliament was in some ways the easier part of her task: there was plenty of documentation, records of speeches, details of legislation and so on. Her problem was to try to see the era through the minds of the royalists and Cromwell's Roundheads, who took their differences to the battleground. Her remedy was to work out the battles on paper, then put her imagination to work as she tramped around the battlefields, if possible in the season when a battle took place. The summers of the civil war were typically English, she noted, with cold windy days and wet evenings. Ice was on the ground in some places in August. The war itself was fought in the main by “talented amateurs”. Cromwell himself had no previous experience of warfare.
This article appeared in the Obituary section of the print edition under the headline “C.V. Wedgwood”
Obituary March 22nd 1997
Discover more
Frank Auerbach aimed only at one memorable image
Britain’s most obsessive figurative painter died on November 11th, aged 93
Baltazar Ushca climbed Chimborazo twice a week
The last Ecuadorean ice-harvester died on October 11th, aged 80
Quincy Jones ruled popular music for half a century
The producer, arranger and film-score writer died on November 3rd, aged 91
Lily Ebert lived to share her story of Auschwitz
The Holocaust survivor and memoirist died on October 9th, aged 100
Fethullah Gulen tried to transform Turkey in the subtlest ways
The scholar, teacher and activist died on Ocrober 20th, aged 83
Sammy Basso led research into his own rare disease
The Italian biologist and longest-lived progeria patient died on October 5th, aged 28