Modern Humanities | ||||||||||||
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| Relationship | Name | Date - Period |
|---|---|---|
| Father | John Neville Keynes | 1852-1924 |
| Mother | Florence Ada Brown | 1861-1958 |
| Wife | Lydia Lopokova | Married 1925 |
| Brother | Geoffrey Keynes | 1887-1982 |
| Friend | Lytton Strachey | 1880-1932 |
| Friend | Lady Ottoline Morrell | 1873-1938 |
| Friend | David Garnett | 1892-1981 |
| Friend | Virginia Woolf | 1882-1941 |
| Friend | Vanessa Bell | 1879-1961 |
| Friend | Thoby Stephen | |
| Friend | Roger Fry | 1866-1934 |
| Friend | Saxon Sydney-Turner | |
| Friend | Clive Bell | 1811-1964 |
| Friend | Leonard Woolf | 1880-1969 |
| Friend | Dora Carrington | 1892-1932 |
| Friend | Duncan Grant | 1885-1978 |
| Friend | Rupert Brooke | |
| Friend | Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson | |
| Friend | George Mallory | |
| Friend | G E Moore | |
| Student/Biographer | R F Harrod | |
| Sister | Margaret Neville Hill | 1885-1970 |
| Friend | Gerald Shove | 1887-1947 |
| Friend | Hugh Dalton | |
| Friend | Francis Birrell | |
| Friend | Bertrand Russell | |
| Friend | Desmond MacCarthy | 1877-1952 |
| Friend | Katherine Cox | |
| Friend | Ludwig Wittenstein | 1889-1951 |
| Friend | E M Forster | |
| Friend | Sheppard | 1881-1968 |
| Friend | James Strachey | 1887-1967 |
| Friend | WHJ (Sebastian) Sprott | 1897-1971 |
| Friend | Raymond Mortimer | |
| Friend | Stephen Tomlin | |
| Friend | Philip Ritchie | |
| Friend | Roger Senhouse | |
| Friend | Edward Sackvillle-West | |
| Friend | Harry Norton | |
| Friend | Katherine Mansfield | |
| Friend | Middleton Murry | |
| Friend | George Rylands | 1902- |
| Friend | Samuel Courtauld | 1876-1947 |
| Friend | Richard Kahn | |
| Friend | Herbert Asquith | 1852-1928 |
| Where | Why | When |
|---|---|---|
| Perse School Kindergarten, Cambridge | Pupil | 1890 |
| St Faith's Preparatory School, Cambridge | Day pupil | 1892 |
Eton | Pupil | |
King's College, Cambridge | Student | October 1902 |
46 Gordon Square, London | Residence | |
| King's College, Cambridge | Fellow | 1909 |
| Tilton, Firle, Sussex | Residence | |
| Title | Genre | Date - Edition |
|---|---|---|
| Indian Currency and Finance | 1913 | |
| The Economic Consequences of the Peace | 1919 | |
| A Treatise on Probability | 1921 | |
| A Revision of the Treaty | 1922 | |
| A Tract on Monetary Reform | 1923 | |
| A Short View of Russia | 1925 | |
| The End of Laissez-Faire | 1926 | |
| A Treatise on Money (2 vols) | 1930 | |
| Essays in Persuasion | 1931 | |
| Essays in Biography | 1933 | |
| The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money | 1936 | |
Biographical Details and Notes
In 1906 he took his Civil Service examinations, going on to work at the India Office 1906-1908.
During World War I and II he was an advisor to the Treasury.
In 1923 he was the chairman of the Liberal publication 'Nation'.
He financed the creation of the Arts Theatre, Cambridge.
His nickname given him by Lytton Strachey was 'Pozzo'
He was a fellow and Bursar of Kings College, Cambridge
During his early time at Cambridge he would play golf with Leonard Woolf at nearby Royston
In 1899 a group formed called the 'Midnight Society' which would meet at midnight each Saturday. The group consisted of Lytton Strachey, Clive Bell, Leonard Woolf, Thoby Stephen nicknamed 'The Goth', and Saxon Sydney-Turner the most scholarly and subdued member of the group.
A member of the Apostles
Notes from his biography by R F Harrod, published London 1951, Macmillon & Co Ltd. "No words can recapture the living essence.
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