BURKE, EDMUND

1729–97, British political writer and statesman, b. Dublin, Ireland.

Early Writings

After graduating (1748) from Trinity College, Dublin, he began the study of law in London but abandoned it to devote himself to writing. His satirical Vindication of Natural Society (1756) attacked the political rationalism and religious skepticism of Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke, and his Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757) was a study in aesthetics. In 1759 he founded the Annual Register, a periodical to which he contributed until 1788. Burke was a member of Samuel Johnson's intimate circle.

Political Career and Later Writings

Burke's political career began in 1765 when he became private secretary to the marquess of Rockingham, then prime minister, and formed a lifelong friendship with that leader. He also entered Parliament in 1765 and there strove for a wiser treatment of the American colonies. In 1766 he spoke in favor of the repeal of the Stamp Act, although he also supported the Declaratory Act, asserting Britain's constitutional right to tax the colonists. In his famous later speeches on American taxation (1774) and on conciliation with the colonies (1775), he did not abandon that position; rather he urged the imprudence of exercising such theoretical rights.

At a time when political allegiances were based largely on family connections and patronage and political opposition was generally regarded as factionalism, Burke, in his Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents (1770), became the first political philosopher to argue the value of political parties. He called for a limitation of crown patronage (so-called economical reform) and as paymaster of the forces (1782–83) in the second Rockingham ministry was able to enact some of his proposals.

He was also interested in reform of the East India Company and drafted the East India Bill presented (1783) by Charles James Fox. Influenced by Sir Philip Francis, he instigated the impeachment and long trial of Warren Hastings. Hastings was acquitted, but Burke's speeches created some new awareness of the responsibilities of empire and of the injustices perpetrated in India and previously unpublicized in England.

Although he championed many liberal and reform causes, Burke believed that political, social, and religious institutions represented the wisdom of the ages; he feared political reform beyond limitations on the power of the crown. Consequently, his Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) made him the spokesman of European conservatives. His stand against the French Revolution—and, by implication, against parliamentary reform—caused him to break with Fox and his Whigs in 1791. Burke's Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs (1791) shows how closely he approached the Tory position of the younger William Pitt. He withdrew from political life in 1795.

Influence

Burke left, in his many and diverse writings, a monumental construction of British political thought that had far-reaching influence in England, America, and France for many years. He held unrestricted rationalism in human affairs to be destructive. He affirmed the utility of habit and prejudice and the importance of continuity in political experience. The son of a Protestant father and a Roman Catholic mother and himself a Protestant, he never ceased to criticize the English administration in Ireland and the galling discrimination against Catholics.

Bibliography

See his correspondence (9 vol., 1958–70); selections ed. by W. J. Bate (1960); biographies by P. M. Magnus (1939, repr. 1973) and S. Ayling (1988); studies by T. W. Copeland (1949, repr. 1970), C. Parkin (1956, repr. 1968), C. B. Cone (2 vol., 1957–64), P. J. Stanlis (1958, repr. 1986), G. W. Chapman (1967), R. Kirk (1967), B. T. Wilkins (1967), and C. C. O'Brien (1992).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Burke Edmund  - 5574 results

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...3 1. The Muse Divorced. Poem EDMUND BURKE 21 2. The Answer to it. Poem...28 4. An Answer to the Pillow. EDMUND BURKE 29 5. An Epistolary Essay on the...An Epistle to Dr Nugent. Poem EDMUND BURKE 35 7. A Funeral Oration on the...
...189 , 594 - 596 , 606 - 609 , 612 - 614 . Burke, Mrs, Edmund, 285 , 342 , 347 , 359 ; accompanies husband...Burke, Mary Nagle, 289 - 290 , 326 , 359 Burke, Richard father of Edmund , 278 Burke, Richard brother of Edmund , and C. OHara...
...divided for convenience into four parts: I Edmund Burke: Primary Works, II Edmund Burke: Secondary Sources, III Replies to Burke and...General Background: Secondary Sources. I. Edmund Burke: Primary Works Annual Register , years 1760...
...See also Donald C. Bryant, "Edmund Burke: A Generation of Scholarship and...91-115. 119. Russel Kirk, "Edmund Burke and Natural Rights," The Review...to Santayana New York: 1953 ; Edmund Burke: A Genius Reconsidered New Rochelle...
...OConnell, Basil. The Right Hon. Edmund Burke: A Basis for a Pedigree. Journal...Joseph L. III. The Metaphysics of Edmund Burke. New York: Fordham University...Life of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke. 5th edition. London, 1872...
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EDMUND BURKE, MARIE ANTOINETTE, AND THE PROCEDURE...been generally positive. In England, Edmund Burke watched the Revolution with great interest...contemporaneous imaginations. (1) Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France...
...Priest to Urban Prelate: Father Edmund Burke Kilroy. by Michael Power This...unconventional Career path of Father Edmund Burke Kilroy (1830-1904), and the...cheminement de carriere du pere Edmund Burke Kilroy (1830-1904) et des raisons...
Luke Gibbons. Edmund Burke and Ireland: Aesthetics, Politics...by Victoria Myers Luke Gibbons. Edmund Burke and Ireland: Aesthetics, Politics...Press, 2003. Pp. 304. $65.00. Edmund Burke and Ireland joins a mounting collection...
...Liberty, and Reform: Speeches and Letters of Edmund Burke On Empire, Liberty, and Reform: Speeches and Letters o fEdmund Burke, edited by David Bromwich. Edmund Burke is today most known for his political theory...
...examines the relationship between Edmund Burke (1729/30-97) and his friend...br/ The Correspondence of Edmund Burke, vol. 1, April 1744-June 1768...emotional mental states. (2) Edmund Burke to Philip Francis, 9 June 1777...
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July 9th, 1797: Edmund Burke, political writer and philosopher, dies Edmund Burke breathed his last in Beaconsfield, at the heart of the Home Counties. a place with which one of British Conservatisms most seminal figures, Benjamin Disraeli...
Edmund Burke. by Maurice Glasman Edmund Burke (1729-97) was right about a few things. His great book Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) was right about revolutions, institutions and tradition. In its covenan-tal conception...
...The Moral Imagination: From Edmund Burke to Lionel Trilling. by Roger Kimball...Himmelfarb The Moral Imagination: From Edmund Burke to Lionel Trilling. Ivan R. Dee...her latest collection. It was Edmund Burke, Himmelfarb notes in her introduction...
Reactionary Prophet: Edmund Burke Understood before Anyone Else That...REFLECTIONS ON THE REVOLUTION IN FRANCE: EDMUND BURKE edited by Frank M. Turner Yale...in particular. In point of fact Edmund Burke was neither an Englishman nor a...
...Luissuarez: "Bad Laws Are the Worst Sort of Tyranny" - Edmund Burke (1729-1797), the Irish Statesman and Philosopher...hand here before I go any further. "Bad laws," said Edmund Burke, "are the worst sort of tyranny." So l, this son...
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Edmund Burke as Stubborn Man and Lofty Public Figure...F.P. Locks magisterial study of Edmund Burke meets that challenge exceptionally well...and the final volume bears the title "Edmund Burke: Volume II, 1784-1797." Capturing...
A Masters Degree in Mario Kart? Edmund Burke Must Be Spinning in His Grave. Byline: RICHARD WAGHORNE EDMUND Burkes statue outside Trinity College...Brighton. This is not, perhaps, what Burke had in mind when he asked rhetorically...
Why Complain? We Ask for It; "The Concessions of the Weak Are the Concessions of Fear." - Edmund Burke. Byline: HECTOR R.R. VILLANUEVA WHAT are we complaining about expensive advertising, defacing walls, obscene jingles, foul...
...Estates in Parliament but in the Reporters Gallery Yonder, There Sat a Fourth Estate More Important Than They All. -- Edmund Burke. Byline: Adrian E. Cristobal THE Three Estates were the priesthood, the aristocracy, and the commons, but in modern...
Burke overcomes bad turn to win by Steve Nearman Edmund Burke had many things going for him as he toed the line at the...defending champion going for a three-peat, the 28-year Burke was assigned Bib No. 1. It didnt hurt that he is Irish...
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encyclopedia articles on: Burke Edmund  - 19 results

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BURKE, EDMUND 1729 97, British political writer and statesman...periodical to which he contributed until 1788. Burke was a member of Samuel Johnson s intimate...was generally regarded as factionalism, Burke, in his Thoughts on the Cause of the Present...
...where he was charged with high crimes and misdemeanors by Edmund Burke and Sir Philip Francis, whom he had wounded in a duel...acquittal in 1795, despite the bitter prosecution of Burke, Francis, Richard B. Sheridan, and Charles James Fox...
...called for a reform and reduction of the kings power. Edmund Burke was a leader of this group, as was the eccentric John...with France, which greatly alarmed British society. Burke became Britains leading intellectual opponent of the Revolution...
...the ideas and tendencies of the English Renaissance was Edmund Spenser . His unfinished epic poem The Faerie Queen...Johnson. It included Joshua Reynolds , David Garrick , Edmund Burke , Oliver Goldsmith , and James Boswell , whose biography...
...practicing medicine for a short time, he went to London in 1780, hoping to earn money by his writing. He was befriended by Edmund Burke, whose generous assistance aided in the publication of The Library (1781). He took orders in 1781 and held various...
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