Te lawrence biography
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British archaeological scholar, adventurer, military strategist, and the writer of The Seven Pillars of Wisdom (), an ambitious work, which combines a detailed account of the Arab revolt against the Turks and the author's own spiritual autobiography. T.E. Lawrence's () enigmatic personality still fascinates biographers and his legend has survived many attempts to discredit his achievements.
T.E. Lawrence was better known in his lifetime as 'Lawrence of Arabia' because of the dashing role he played in helping the Arabs against the Turks during World War I. At 31 Lawrence was an international celebrity but, embittered by his country's Middle East policies, he chose a life of obscurity and died at the age of 46 after a motorcycle accident.
"Many men would take the death-sentence without a whimper to escape the life-sentence which fate carries in her other hand." (from The Mint, )
Lawrence was b
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T. E. Lawrence
British Army officer, diplomat and writer (–)
"Lawrence of Arabia" redirects here. For the film, see Lawrence of Arabia (film). For the book, see Lawrence of Arabia: The Authorised Biography of T. E. Lawrence.
Thomas Edward LawrenceCB DSO (16 August – 19 May ) was a British Army officer, archaeologist, diplomat and writer known for his role during the Arab Revolt and Sinai and Palestine campaign against the Ottoman Empire in the First World War. The breadth and variety of his activities and associations, and Lawrence's ability to describe them vividly in writing, earned him international fame as Lawrence of Arabia, a title used for the film based on his wartime activities.
Lawrence was born in Tremadog, Carnarvonshire, Wales, the illegitimate son of Sir Thomas Chapman, an Anglo-Irish landowner, and Sarah Junner, a governess in Chapman's employ. In , Lawrence moved to Oxford, attending the City of Oxford High School for Boys and read history at Jesus
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And the fascination with T.E. Lawrence has remained remarkably strong. “Along with Winston Churchill, he remains perhaps the best-known Englishman in the world,” the historian Phillip Knightley wrote of Lawrence, a bit overenthusiastically, in Over twenty new books on Lawrence were published from to
One of the explanations for the interest in Lawrence is the controversy that has surrounded him. For the playwright George Bernard Shaw, writing in , Lawrence was among those uncommon “persons who have reached the human limit of literary genius and…who have packed into the forepart of their lives an adventure of epic bulk and intensity.” Yet the Oxford historian Hugh Trevor Roper, writing 50 years later, dismisses Lawrence rather harshly as “one of the least attractive” of the twentieth century’s “charlatans, frauds, and fantasists.”
There are lessons on journalism in the origins of the myth of “Lawrence of Arabia,” as well as lessons on history in the relationship of