Abstract
Lewis Namier’s busy life abounds with contradictions. An East European by birth and temperament, he made his mark as one of the ‘most distinguished interpreters of English political history’.1 Although he earned a towering reputation as a historian from his examination of eighteenth-century English politics, the bulk of his writing consisted of newspaper and journal articles on international relations and Zionism, collections of essays on modern European history, and endless minutes and memoranda on the Polish question.
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