Charles Edwyn Vaughan
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Charles Edwyn Vaughan (10 February 1854 – 8 October 1922) was a British academic who specialised in English literature and political philosophy.[1]
Vaughan was born in Leicester and educated at Marlborough College.[1][2] He matriculated at Balliol College, Oxford on 31 May 1873,[3][4] and graduated with a BA in 1878 and an MA in 1883.[3] Vaughan was one of the many students at Balliol who came under the influence of the idealist philosopher T. H. Green, who was also his cousin.[2]
Vaughan served as Professor of English Language and Literature at three different institutions: University College, Cardiff between 1889 and 1898,[2] the Durham College of Science from 1889 to 1904 and at the University of Leeds from 1904 until 1913.[5][2] He then moved to Manchester and was appointed Governor of John Rylands Library.[2]
Vaughan's magnum opus was the Political Writings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, which he composed between the 1890s and 1915, when it was published in two volumes by Cambridge University Press.[6] Harold Laski considered Vaughan as "much the best of his [Rousseau] editors" and said that he was "an ardent devotee" of Rousseau.[7]