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  1. Alfred Richard Orage (22 January 1873 – 6 November 1934) was a British influential figure in socialist politics and modernist culture, now best known for editing the magazine The New Age before the First World War.

  2. 29 de mar. de 2024 · Alfred Richard Orage (born Jan. 22, 1873, Dacre, Yorkshire, Eng.—died Nov. 6, 1934, London) was an influential English editor and social thinker. Orage became an elementary school teacher at Leeds, Yorkshire, in 1893, lectured on theosophy , and in 1900 helped found the avant-garde Leeds Arts Club.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Equipped with the barest formal education, a formidable natural intelligence and an unquenchable yearning to understand, ALFRED RICHARD ORAGE emerged from British 19th Century working class poverty to survey the significant literary, psychological, political, and spiritual trends of the early 20th century.

  4. Alfred Richard Orage was born in 1873 in North Yorkshire in the village of Dacre, near Harrogate. In 1874 his family moved to his father’s native home in Huntingdonshire. Here Orage went to the village school, and would have gone to work at the age of twelve had not the local squire, impressed with his intelligence and charm, made it possible ...

  5. Alfred Richard Orage. Date of birth: 22 Jan 1873. City of birth: Dacre, North Yorkshire. Country of birth: England. Date of death: 06 Nov 1934. Location of death: England. About: Orage held a central position in early twentieth-century cultural circles in Britain, particularly as editor of the influential New Age weekly journal.

  6. Alfred Richard Orage (1873–1934) A lfred Richard Orage was born on January 22, 1873, in Dacre, Yorkshire, England, and died November 6, 1934, in London at the age of 61. George Bernard Shaw said he was the most brilliant editor England had produced for 100 years, while T. S. Eliot said he was "the finest critical intelligence of our day."

  7. Alfred Richard Orage. Alfred Richard Orage (1873-1934) was a British intellectual, who was the editor of the magazine The New Age. Born on 22 January 1873 in Dacre, Yorkshire, England, into a nonconformist religious family, he worked as a schoolteacher and wrote for a newspaper of the Independent Labour Party on such topics as philosophy of ...