Robertson, Sir Dennis Holme (1890-1963), knight, economist

Área de identidad

Tipo de entidad

Persona

Forma autorizada del nombre

Robertson, Sir Dennis Holme (1890-1963), knight, economist

Forma(s) paralela(s) de nombre

    Forma(s) normalizada del nombre, de acuerdo a otras reglas

      Otra(s) forma(s) de nombre

        Identificadores para instituciones

        Área de descripción

        Fechas de existencia

        1890-1963

        Historia

        Robertson was born at Lowestoft in 1890, but the family soon moved to Whittlesford where the young Robertson was tutored by his father until in 1902 he became a King's scholar at Eton, where he was to rise to be Captain of the School. In 1908 he came up to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was to show all-round abilities that were to mark him out for the rest of his life. In 1910 he gained a first in part I of the Classics Tripos, moved over to Economics and took a first in part II of the Economics Tripos. He won the Chancellor's Medal for English verse in 1909 and again in the two following years. He was an excellent actor, President of the Amateur Dramatic Club and President of the Union. In 1913 he won the Cobden Prize and the following year was elected a Fellow of Trinity, an honour he was to hold until 1938 and from 1944 until his death.

        The dissertation that Robertson entered for his prize fellowship was worked into A Study of industrial fluctuations, his first major work which was published while he was serving in WWI, having campaigned vigorously for a peaceful settlement before the outbreak. On his return in 1919 Robertson resumed his fellowship and was appointed a lecturer and later reader at Cambridge University, his major works of this first period at Cambridge being Money, The Control of industry, Banking policy and the price level, and a number of important contributions to economic journals. However, perhaps the most significant occurrence was the break with Keynes. Robertson worked closely with Keynes from 1919 to the early thirties, but it is clear that by the time Keynes's Treatise on Money was published that there were not inconsiderable differences between the two men which were to grow as Keynes worked on the General theory.... This refutation of some of Keynes's theories was to affect Robertson for the rest of his academic life. To those that swallowed Keynes hook, line and sinker, he was unable to make a positive statement, yet the respect that Robertson was held in the business, banking and civil-service communities puts the question of his influence in a different light.

        In 1938 Robertson accepted the Sir Ernest Cassell chair of economics at London University but spent much of his tenure involved in war work. In 1944 he returned to Cambridge as Professor of Political Economy. Keynes, however, cast a long shadow over Cambridge economics, and RobertsonÕs thirteen years in the chair can not have been particularly happy ones, as the disciples of Keynes who filled the faculty attempted to exclude him as much as was possible from its business. They were unable, however, to stop the publication of his work. As long ago as 1931, with the publication of Economic fragments, Robertson's method of bringing his ideas into the public arena were set. Articles were published in various journals and then, when the material sufficed, consolidated volumes (5 in all) were produced. Robertson also published his Cambridge faculty lectures in three volumes and his 1960 Marshall lectures.

        Lugares

        Estatuto jurídico

        Funciones, ocupaciones y actividades

        Mandatos/fuentes de autoridad

        Estructura/genealogía interna

        Contexto general

        Área de relaciones

        Entidad relacionada

        Robertson, James (1836-1903), clergyman, schoolmaster, and poet (1836-1903)

        Identifier of related entity

        Categoría de la relación

        familia

        Tipo de relación

        Robertson, James (1836-1903), clergyman, schoolmaster, and poet es el padre de Robertson, Sir Dennis Holme (1890-1963), knight, economist

        Fechas de relación

        Descripción de la relación

        Entidad relacionada

        Robertson, Constance Elizabeth (1857-1935), wife of Rev James Robertson (1857-1933)

        Identifier of related entity

        Categoría de la relación

        familia

        Tipo de relación

        Robertson, Constance Elizabeth (1857-1935), wife of Rev James Robertson es el padre de Robertson, Sir Dennis Holme (1890-1963), knight, economist

        Fechas de relación

        Descripción de la relación

        Entidad relacionada

        Robertson, Ainslie John (1880-1965), brother of Sir Dennis Holme Robertson (1880-1965)

        Identifier of related entity

        Categoría de la relación

        familia

        Tipo de relación

        Robertson, Ainslie John (1880-1965), brother of Sir Dennis Holme Robertson es el hermano de Robertson, Sir Dennis Holme (1890-1963), knight, economist

        Fechas de relación

        Descripción de la relación

        Área de puntos de acceso

        Puntos de acceso por materia

        Puntos de acceso por lugar

        Occupations

        Área de control

        Identificador de registro de autoridad

        Identificador de la institución

        Reglas y/o convenciones usadas

        Estado de elaboración

        Nivel de detalle

        Fechas de creación, revisión o eliminación

        Idioma(s)

          Escritura(s)

            Fuentes

            Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

            Notas de mantención