Toynbee was born in London, the son of the physician
Joseph Toynbee, a pioneering
otolaryngologist. One of nine children, his sister was the bacteriologist
Grace Frankland, and his brother was
Paget Toynbee, the
Dante scholar. Toynbee was the uncle, via his brother Harry Valpy Toynbee, of
universal historian Arnold Joseph Toynbee (1889–1975). The two are often confused due to the similarity of their names. Toynbee attended
public schools in
Blackheath and
Woolwich. In 1873 he began to study
political economy at
Oxford University, first at
Pembroke College and from 1875 at
Balliol College, where he went on to teach after his graduation in 1878. He was deeply influenced by
John Ruskin while at Oxford.
W. G. Collingwood states that Toynbee was one of Ruskin's warmest admirers and ablest pupils. He further notes that the philanthropic work of Toynbee truly illustrated the teaching of one of Ruskin's greatest books,
Unto This Last. His lectures on the history of the
Industrial Revolution in 18th- and 19th-century Britain proved widely influential; in fact, Toynbee coined, or at least effectively popularised, the term "Industrial Revolution" in the Anglophone world—in Germany and elsewhere it had been brought into circulation earlier by
Friedrich Engels, also under the impression of the industrial changes in Britain. He married the college administrator
Charlotte Atwood on 26 June 1879. His wife was 12 years his senior and a cousin of
Harold Davidson, the famous Rector of
Stiffkey. Toynbee died in 1883, at age 30. His health had rapidly deteriorated, probably due to exhaustion by excessive work .
Frederick Rogers notes that the publication of
Henry George's
Progress and Poverty may be said to have brought about Toynbee's death:
Toynbee genealogy The Toynbees have been prominent in British intellectual society for several generations
(this diagram is not a comprehensive Toynbee family tree): {{tree chart | AT | | HVT | | GM |y| LMH | | | AT=
Arnold ToynbeeEconomic historian1852–1883|HVT=Harry Valpy Toynbee ==Economic history==