He was educated at
Bootham School (1921–1924) in York and at
Bradford Grammar School (1924–1925). He read History as an undergraduate at
Oriel College, Oxford University in 1926–1929, spent the following two years studying in Munich and Rome, then returned to Oxford, to
Merton College, where he was a Harmsworth Senior Scholar (1932-1934) and a Junior Research Fellow (1934-1936). During the Second World War, in which he served in the
Royal Air Force, Barraclough's sympathy for the
USSR and public opposition to the
Warsaw Uprising of 1944 drew the criticism of
George Orwell, among others. He was Professor of Medieval History,
University of Liverpool, 1945–1956, in which period he lived in the
Seneschal's House, Halton Village, Stevenson Research Professor,
University of London, 1956–1962,
University of California, 1965–1968, and Professor of History,
Brandeis University, 1968–1970 and 1972–1981. He was
Chichele Professor of Modern History, the University of Oxford from 1970 to 1973. Barraclough began his career as a medievalist but developed into a contemporary global historian. He was deeply concerned about history's uses and relevance in the 20th century. It seemed to him that political debate and ultimately political decisions suffered from a lack of historical insight. To rectify this problem Barraclough developed historiographical methods for comparative history. By anchoring study of the past at the origins of a historical investigation, while simultaneously researching contemporary areas most directly connected to that anchor research, his methods established comparisons between past and present. With this two-pronged research structure, Barraclough was able to organize his investigations by looking from the past forward and from the present backward. He sought historical threads that connect past to present while also observing the discontinuities that separate past from present. In his writing, Barraclough turned to geography, social and economic cycles, empires, trade and tribes as historical units he felt most clearly connect the past to present or combine to end that continuity. Using these methods allowed him to sketch an outline of world history, identifying its ups, downs and turning points. His first two books on historiography,
History in a Changing World and
An Introduction to Contemporary History are collections of essays. With scholarly authority, Barraclough served as editor of
The Times Atlas of World History, which continues to be revised. He was also General Editor for the popular "Library of European Civilization" series, published by
Thames and Hudson from 1965 with many notable contributors. ==Works==