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A.L. Rowse

A. L. Rowse
CH FRSL FBA FRHistS
Makins, Rowse and Baring.jpg
Rowse (centre), Roger Makins and Evelyn Baring photographed in 1926 by Lady Ottoline Morrell
Born Alfred Leslie Rowse
4 December 1903
Tregonissey, St Austell, Cornwall
Died 3 October 1997(1997-10-03) (aged 93)
Cornwall, UK
Occupation Poet, academic and Elizabethan historian
Notable awards Companion of Honour
Fellow of the British Academy
Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
Fellow of the Royal Historical Society

Alfred Leslie Rowse CH FRSL FBA FRHistS (4 December 1903 – 3 October 1997), known publicly as A. L. Rowse but to friends and family as Leslie, was a British author and historian from Cornwall, England, UK.

Rowse is best known for his work on Elizabethan England and his poetry about Cornwall. He was also a Shakespearean scholar and biographer.

Rowse was born at Tregonissey, near St Austell, Cornwall, the son of Richard Rowse, a china clay worker, and Annie (née Vanson). Despite his parents being poor and semi-illiterate, he won a place at St Austell County Grammar School (now Poltair School – which has named part of its curriculum the Rowse Pathway) and then a scholarship to Christ Church, Oxford in 1921. He was encouraged in his pursuit of an academic career by a fellow Cornish man of letters, Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, of Polperro, who recognised his ability from an early age. Rowse endured doubting comments about his paternity, thus he paid particular attention to his mother's association with a local farmer and butcher from Polgooth, near St Austell, Frederick William May (1872–1953). Nonetheless any such frustrations were channelled into academia, which reaped him dividends later in life.


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