Eric J. Hobsbawm, whose three-volume economic history of the rise of industrial capitalism established him as Britain’s pre-eminent
Marxist historian, died on Monday in London. He was 95.
The cause was pneumonia, said his daughter, Julia Hobsbawm.
Mr. Hobsbawm, the leading light in a group of historians within the British Communist Party that included Christopher Hill, E. P. Thompson
and Raymond Williams, helped recast the traditional understanding of history as a series of great events orchestrated by great men.
Instead, he focused on labor movements in the 19th century and what he called the “pre-political” resistance of bandits,
millenarians and urban rioters in early capitalist societies.
His masterwork remains his incisive and often eloquent survey of the period he referred to as “the long 19th century,” which he
analyzed in three volumes: “The Age of Revolution: 1789-1848,” “The Age of Capital: 1848-1875” and “The Age of Empire: 1874-1914.”
To this trilogy he appended a coda in 1994, “The Age of Extremes,”
published in the United States with the subtitle “A History of the World, 1914-1991.”
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