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  1. Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse, FBA (8 September 1864 – 21 June 1929) was an English liberal political theorist and sociologist, who has been considered one of the leading and earliest proponents of social liberalism. His works, culminating in his famous book Liberalism (1911), occupy a seminal position within the canon of New Liberalism.

  2. Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse ( 8 de Setembro de 1864 — 21 de Junho de 1929) foi um académico e um político liberal britânico. Foi um dos teóricos do novo liberalismo ( liberalismo social) juntamente com Thomas Hill Green. Foi o primeiro professor de sociologia de uma universidade britânica em Oxford (1887-1897) e mais tarde na ...

  3. Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse (born Sept. 8, 1864, St. Ives, Cornwall, Eng.—died June 21, 1929, Alençon, France) was an English sociologist and philosopher who tried to reconcile liberalism with collectivism in the interest of social progress.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Type: Biography. Leonard Trelawney Hobhouse, born at Liskeard, Cornwall on 8 September 1864, came from a long line of Anglican clerics. His father, the Venerable Reginald Hobhouse, was Rector of St Ive, near Liskeard, a position he had obtained through his political connections with Sir Robert Peel. His mother was a Trelawney from the prominent ...

  5. 11 de jun. de 2018 · The English sociologist and philosopher Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse (1864-1929), one of the major theoreticians of liberalism in England before World War I, advocated a modified form of state socialism tempered by traditional liberal principles. Born Sept. 8, 1864, at St. Ives, Cornwall, L.T. Hobhouse was the son of a prominent ...

  6. Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse (September 8, 1864 – June 21, 1929) was a British liberal sociologist and politician. He worked as an academic and a journalist, and was the first appointed professor of sociology in a British university.

  7. Summary. Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse was the most sophisticated intellectual exponent of the ‘New Liberalism’ which emerged in Britain in the closing years of the nineteenth century.