Source: https://davidderrick.wordpress.com/a-toynbee-bibliography/
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 15:47:51+00:00

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Scroll down for the Survey of International Affairs.
See posts on: the pre-Study œuvre, the Study and after, the travel books, late books on Greece and Rome, the last two books.
A second printing in 1916 is with an Introduction by the Earl of Cromer, G.C.B., O.M. Cromer’s piece had appeared as a review in The Spectator on March 4 1916. Morton’s bibliography mentions only one edition, in 1915 and with Cromer.
This was published on its own, but G. M. Gathorne-Hardy, Honorary Secretary, writes in a Preface that it was “originally written as an introduction to the Survey of International Affairs in 1920-3, and was intended for publication as part of the same volume”. In Experiences, Toynbee calls this cross-section of the world c 1920 a “base-line” for the Survey.
Lectures delivered at Columbia University on themes from a then unpublished part of A Study of History. Published “by arrangement with Oxford University Press in an edition limited to 400 copies and not to be reissued”.
Extracts from Thucydides, Xenophon, Plutarch and Polybius. Presumably taken from one or both of the previous volumes of translations.
BBC Reith Lectures for 1952.
Based on Gifford Lectures delivered in the University of Edinburgh in 1952 and 1953.
Hewett Lectures, delivered at the Andover Newton Theological School, Massachusetts; Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, Massachusetts; and Union Theological Seminary, New York, in 1955.
Dyason Lectures, delivered (presumably in Deakin in the Australian Capital Territory, where the AIIA is based) in 1956.
Caplan, below, was not strictly, as it claimed to be, “the first abridged one-volume edition”.
Beatty Memorial Lectures delivered at McGill University, Montreal, 1961.
Public lectures delivered at the University of Pennsylvania, spring 1961.
Weatherhead Foundation Lectures delivered at the University of Puerto Rico, February 1962.
The three sets of lectures published separately in the UK in 1962 appeared in New York in the same year in one volume under the title America and the World Revolution and Other Lectures, OUP.
Separate publication of part of Vol VII of A Study of History.
Partly based on lectures given at the University of Denver in the last quarter of 1964, and at New College, Sarasota, Florida and the University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee in the first quarter of 1965.
Sponsored by the Institute of Urban Environment of the School of Architecture, Columbia University.
Rewritten version of a dialogue between Toynbee and Professor Kei Wakaizumi of Kyoto Sangyo University: essays preceded by questions by Wakaizumi. Toynbee had met Wakaizumi in Japan in 1967. In 1970, Waikaizumi formulated a series of questions for Toynbee, sent them to him, and then travelled to London, where he conversed with him for seven days, three hours a day. Daily instalments ran in the Mainichi Shimbun from August 24 to December 9.
Recorded, presumably in London, for 1972-73 programmes of Radio Free Europe.
The record of a conversation with Ikeda which took place in London over several days. The book does not give a date. Toynbee’s biographer gives it as May 1972. The Soka Gakkai website, accessed in June 2007, said May 1972 and May 1973.
Includes advance extracts from The Greeks and Their Heritages.
Toynbee was with the Royal (at first British) Institute of International Affairs from its move to Chatham House in 1924 until June 1955.
The Survey of International Affairs was published by OUP under its auspices between 1925 and 1977 and covered the years 1920 to 1962. Surveys for a particular year often deal with matters outside the year.
This list names main contributors during the Toynbee years. In some later volumes Toynbee’s contributions are only a note or introduction.
The list deals with i) title page, ii) pre-contents front matter, iii) table of contents, iv) post-contents front matter. Referring to Part, Chapter and Section gives an idea of the hierarchy (not necessarily length) of contributions within each volume, but the divisions are not comparable between one volume and another.
i) By Arnold J. Toynbee.
ii) Preface by G. M. Gathorne-Hardy. Note by the Writer, signed A. J. T., with acknowledgements. Neither dated.
Gathorne-Hardy: “Ever since its foundation during the Peace Conference at Paris, the British Institute of International Affairs has had in view the publication of an annual survey of the chief events in international relations. It was, however, determined that a History of the Peace Conference should first be produced. The sixth and final volume of the History of the Peace Conference of Paris [above, to which Toynbee contributed] appeared in March 1924, and the Executive Committee of the Institute then decided to make preparations for the first volume of the annual survey, for the year 1924, and at the same time for connecting this volume with the History of the Peace Conference of Paris by a separate survey designed to cover the intervening years.
“The Committee was fortunate in securing the services of Mr. Arnold J. Toynbee to carry out the very arduous and difficult task of writing this introductory volume – the Survey of International Affairs, 1920-3 – and to bring out the first volumes of the annual survey. The first of the series – the Survey of International Affairs for 1924 – will be published during the autumn.
ii) Preface by H. A. L. Fisher. Note by the Writer, signed A. J. T. Neither dated.
ii) Preface by G. M. Gathorne-Hardy. Acknowledgements by the Writer, signed A. J. T. Neither dated. System of Transliteration, not attributed.
i) By C. A. Macartney and others.
ii) Preface, not dated, by G. M. Gathorne-Hardy.
i) Compiled by V. M. Boulter.
iii) Section on The United States and the Permanent Court of International Justice by H. Lauterpacht. Chapter on Inter-Ally Debts by R. J. Stopford. Chapter on The International Steel Cartel by M. S. Birkett.
i) By Arnold J. Toynbee. Assisted by V. M. Boulter.
ii) Prefatory Note, September 1930, by F. G. Kenyon.
iii) Section on International Conferences on Economic Co-operation by C. R. S. Harris. Section on The History of German Reparations from the Dawes Plan to the Young Report jointly by R. J. Stopford and J. Menken.
ii) Prefatory Note, September 1931, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Chapters on World Economic Tendencies since the War and Conferences on Concerted Economic Action (Tariff Truce) by H. V. Hodson. Chapter on The History of German Reparations from the Signing of the Young Report to the Coming into Force of the Hague Agreements by R. J. Stopford. Chapter on The German Economy and Reparations by J. Menken.
ii) Prefatory Note, October 1932, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Chapter Nemesis: The Financial Outcome of the Post-War Years by H. V. Hodson.
ii) Prefatory Note, September 1933, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Chapters on Tariffs and Exchange Control: The Struggle to Escape and Debts and Defaults by H. V. Hodson. Chapter on German Reparations and War Debts (1931-2) by R. J. Stopford. Chapter on Non-German Reparations by Jules Menken.
ii) Prefatory Note, September 1934, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Chapter on Adjustment and Revival by H. V. Hodson. Chapter on Relations between Cuba and the United States (1898-1934) by K. Duff. Chapters on Internal Developments in China and Japan, The Course of the Sino-Japanese Hostilities and Russo-Japanese Relations and the C.E.R. Crisis by G. E. Hubbard. Chapter on The Philippine Islands and the United States by A. D. Holt.
ii) Prefatory Note, August 1935, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Part on World Economic Affairs by H. V. Hodson. Section on The Islamic Congress at Jerusalem in December 1931 by H. A. R. Gibb. Chapter on Relations between France and Germany over the Saar by K. Duff. Part on The Far East by G. E. Hubbard.
ii) Prefatory Note, September, 1936, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Sections on Relations between Germany and Poland (January 1934-May 1936) and Relations between Germany and Lithuania over Memel (1933-5) by K. Duff. Part on The Far East by G. E. Hubbard. Part on World Economic Affairs by H. V. Hodson.
ii) Preface, October 1936, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
ii) Preface, October 1937, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Part on World Economic Affairs by H. V. Hodson. Chapter on The Montreux Convention Regarding the Régime of the Black Sea Straits (20th July, 1936) by D. A. Routh. Chapter on The Administration of the British Mandate for Palestine, 1935-6 by H. Beeley. Part on The American Continent by Katharine Duff. Part on The Far East by G. E. Hubbard.
ii) Preface, October 1938, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Part on World Economic Affairs by Allan G. B. Fisher. Part on The Far East by G. E. Hubbard. Chapters on Poland and Her Neighbours and The Danubian Countries by C. A. Macartney. Chapter on German Economic Policy in South-Eastern Europe by Allan G. B. Fisher. Chapters on The Administration of the British Mandate for Palestine, 1937 and The Montreux Convention Regarding the Abolition of the Capitulations in Egypt and the Admission of Egypt to Membership of the League of Nations by H. Beeley.
iii) Part on The Course of the War in Spain by Katharine Duff.
ii) Preface, Oxford, 19th December, 1940, by Arnold J. Toynbee.
iii) Part on World Economic Affairs by Allan G. B. Fisher. Chapter on The Course of the War in Spain by Katharine Duff. Part on The Mediterranean by H. Beeley (covers only Palestine and the cession to Turkey of Alexandretta). Part on The Far East by G. E. Hubbard. Part on The American Continent by D. Mitrany.
i) By R. G. D. Laffan. Revised by V. M. Toynbee and P. E. Barker in the light of recent publications. With an Introduction by Arnold J. Toynbee.
ii) Preface, July 1950, by Arnold J. Toynbee. The Preface does not mention Toynbee’s Introduction.
iii) Nor does the table of contents credit him. The Introduction itself is signed Arnold J. Toynbee.
iv) Abbreviations Used in Citing References in Footnotes. Note. Note on Names of Places in Czechoslovakia. None attributed.
i) By R. G. D. Laffan and others. Edited by Veronica M. Toynbee.
ii) Preface, May 1952, by Veronica M. Toynbee.
iii) Part on The Crisis over Czechoslovakia, October 1938 to 15 March 1939 by R. G. D. Laffan and V. M. Toynbee. Part on North-Eastern Europe by V. M. Toynbee. Part on The U.S.S.R. by F. Ashton-Gwatkin. Part on The Balkan States in 1938 by George Kirk and V. M. Toynbee. Part on The Rearmament of Great Britain, France, and Germany down to the Munich Agreement of 30 September 1938 by Viscount Chilston.
iv) Abbreviations Used in Citing References in Footnotes. Note. Note on Names of Places in Czechoslovakia in Part I. Neither attributed.
Eleven unnumbered volumes, shown in order of publication, with their places in the “logical order” as presented in the Prefatory Note to The Initial Triumph of the Axis.
i) Edited by Arnold Toynbee and Frank T. Ashton-Gwatkin.
ii) The Plan of the Book, March 1951, by Arnold Toynbee.
iii) Sections on The Western Hemisphere, The British Commonwealth, China and Japan by Arnold Toynbee. Section on The Soviet Union by Edward Crankshaw. Section on India and Ceylon by H. V. Hodson. Section on Burma by F. S. V. Donnison. Section on South-East Asia by Victor Purcell. Section on The Middle East by George E. Kirk. Sections on Spain and Portugal; Switzerland, the Low Countries, and Scandinavia; Eastern Europe and Germany by Martin Wight. Section on France by D. R. Gillie. Section on Italy by Katharine Duff. Part on Comparative Strength of the Great Powers by H. C. Hillmann. Part on The Balance of Power by Martin Wight.
iv) Abbreviations Used in Citing References in Footnotes. Note. Neither attributed.
i) By George Kirk. With an Introduction by Arnold Toynbee.
ii) Preface, June 1952, by George Kirk.
iii) Part called Introduction by Arnold Toynbee. Chapter on The Expulsion of Axis Nationals from Afghanistan by Sir William Fraser-Tytler. Chapter on The Middle East Supply Centre by Guy Hunter.
i) By William Hardy McNeill [who became Toynbee’s biographer].
ii) Foreword, undated, by Arnold Toynbee. Author’s Preface, June 1952.
iii) Appendix II, Lend-Lease by Sir David Waley.
iv) Explanatory Note on the Three World Maps by Arnold Toynbee. Abbreviations Used in Citing References in Footnotes. Note. Neither attributed.
i) Edited by Arnold Toynbee and Veronica M. Toynbee.
iii) Part called Introduction by Arnold Toynbee. Sections on Germany, 1939-45, The Concept of the New Order, The SS and the New Order, Administration, Legal Aspects and The Ukraine under German Occupation, 1941-4 by Clifton J. Child. Section on The German Treatment of the Jews by James Parkes. Sections on The Planning of the New Order in 1940, The Structure of Economic Controls in Europe, Industry and Raw Materials, Labour, Transport, Finance and Conclusions by Patricia Harvey. Section on Food and Agriculture by W. Klatt. Sections on Italy from June 1940 to July 1943, Economic Relations between Germany and Italy, 1940-3 and The German Occupation of Italy and the Neo-Fascist Régime by Katharine Duff. Sections on The Italian Resistance Movement, Partitioned Czechoslovakia; Hungary, Rumania, and Bulgaria, 1941-4; Partitioned Yugoslavia and Albania, 1939-45 by Elizabeth Wiskemann. Chapter on Vichy France by Alfred Cobban. Chapter on The Free French Movement, 1940-2 by Sir Desmond Morton. Part on The Occupied Countries in Western Europe by Viscount Chilston. Sections on Poland, The Ostland and Finland by Sidney Lowery. Section on Greece by Elizabeth Barker.
iv) Explanatory Note on the Three World Maps by Arnold Toynbee. Abbreviations Used in the Text and Footnotes. Note. Neither attributed.
Part of the wartime series.
i) By F. C. Jones, Hugh Borton and B. R. Pearn.
iii) Part called Introduction by Arnold Toynbee. Part on The Far East during the War by F. C. Jones. Chapter on The Breakdown of Peace Efforts in China, August 1945 to January 1947 by F. C. Jones. Chapter on South-East Asia, 15 August 1945 to 31 December 1946 by B. R. Pearn. Chapters on Japan under the Allied Occupation, 1945-7, Korea under American and Soviet Occupation, 1945-7 and The Territory of the Pacific: from Mandate to Trusteeship by Hugh Borton.
iii) Part on Economic Warfare by W. N. Medlicott. Part on Latin America during the Second World War by Constance Howard. Chapter on Sweden by Agnes H. Hicks. Chapters on Switzerland and Eire by Constance Howard. Chapters on Spain between the Allies and the Axis and Portugal by Katharine Duff. Chapter on Turkey by G. E. Kirk.
ii) Prefatory Note, not dated, by A. J. T. [and] V. M. T.
iii) Part called Introduction by A. J. Toynbee. Part on The Attempt by the Western Powers to Organize Resistance to Further Aggression by the Axis Powers by V. M. Toynbee. Part on Italy by Katharine Duff. Part on Germany not attributed in Contents, but stated in the Prefatory Note to be a revision by Mrs M. Taylor of a draft “originally prepared in the War-time Survey Department”. Part on The U.S.S.R. not attributed in Contents, but stated in the Prefatory Note to be a revision by Mrs. Toynbee of a draft originally written by Mr. Ashton-Gwatkin. Part on The Last Ten Days of Peace in Europe by P. E. Baker. Part on The United States of America by Constance Howard. Part on The Far East by F. C. Jones. Part on Rearmament in Britain and France between the Munich Crisis and the Outbreak of War by Viscount Chilston.
iii) Part called Summary of Military, Naval and Air Operations, September 1939 to December 1941 By General Sir James Marshall-Cornwall. Chapter on Poland by V. M. Toynbee. Annex on The Russo-German Agreements of 28 September and 3 November 1939 and 5 September 1940 for the Transfer of Populations between Territories under Soviet, and Territories under German, Jurisdiction by Arnold Toynbee. Chapters on The Baltic States and Finland by Alexander Elkin. Chapters on Hitler’s “Peace Offensive” in the Autumn of 1939 and The Home Front in the United Kingdom by Arnold Toynbee. Chapters on Denmark: Political Antecedents to the German Invasion and Norway: Political Antecedents to the German Invasion by Agnes H. Hicks. Chapter on The Netherlands: Political Antecedents to the German Offensive by Humphrey Higgens. Chapter on Belgium: Political Antecedents to the German Offensive by Constance Howard. Chapter on The Political Background in France, 3 September 1939 to 10 May 1940 by Major Philip Lane. Chapter on The Fall of France by Alfred Cobban. Chapter on Italy: from Non-Belligerency to Intervention by Katharine Duff. Chapter on The Economic Background in Great Britain by Patricia Harvey. Chapter on The Commonwealth by Geoffrey Cox. Part on The Subjugation of South-Eastern Europe by Elizabeth Wiskemann. Part on The Breach between Germany and the Soviet Union not attributed in Contents, but stated in the Prefatory Note to be a revision by Professor Toynbee of a draft originally written by Mr. Ashton-Gwatkin. Part on The United States of America and the European War, September 1939 to December 1941 by Constance Howard. Part on Japan by F. C. Jones.
i) By Peter Calvocoressi. Assisted by Sheila Harden. With an Introduction by Arnold Toynbee.
ii) Preface, Easter 1952, by Peter Calvocoressi. Explanatory Note on the Three World Maps by Arnold Toynbee.
iii) Introduction by Arnold Toynbee. Sections on European Economic Co-operation and Under-Developed Areas by R. G. Hawtrey. Sections on China and Japan by F. C. Jones.
iv) Abbreviations. Note. Neither attributed.
i) By Coral Bell. Edited by F. C. Benham.
ii) Preface, not dated, by Frederic Benham.
iii) Part on The Far East by F. C. Jones.
iv) Explanatory Note on the Three World Maps by Arnold Toynbee. Abbreviations. Note. Neither attributed.
Dialogues published in the English-speaking world, books edited by Toynbee or co-authored with one other writer or collaborator, and the Survey of International Affairs are mentioned even when his contributions may have amounted to fewer than 70 pages.
Publication dates are for first editions (first book publication of the relevant material). The list does not show order of publication within a given year. Nor does Morton’s list. The place of publication is London unless otherwise stated. If a work was published simultaneously in the UK and elsewhere, only the UK details are shown.
Details of prefaces and other front matter are shown for the Survey volumes, but not systematically for other volumes.
broadcasts that had not, to her knowledge, been preserved on film or tape unless they were subsequently printed, and those are listed as articles.
Paget Toynbee rebuked his nephew in writing for not differentiating his name from that of the other Arnold Toynbee, Paget’s late brother, on the title page of Nationality and the War, Dent, 1915. Given the fame of the earlier Arnold Toynbee and Arnold J. Toynbee’s obscurity in 1915, the rebuke seems justified. Most of his subsequent books – except for his other Dent production of 1915, The New Europe, and a few at the end of his life – were signed Arnold J. Toynbee.
Which of Toynbee’s books or papers was the source of the philosophy of grasping the future in ‘The Toynbee Convector’ story?
I’m afraid I don’t know. Please let me know if you find out. And I have a confession to make: I’ve never read Bradbury’s story, though I have read Fahrenheit 451!
In one of Sir Arnold Toynbee’s articles about Alexander the Great (in Russian translation of 1979 – I do not know the original name) I’ve found that Alexander decided to send his mother with some Greec veterans to Socotra island in the Indian Ocean – but from the text I didn’t understand if he did it really and what source is a reference for this statement?
Which of Toynbee’s articles is this and what sources did he use for this statement?
I wish I could help. The web might have information.
I will let you know if I learn anything.
Thank you, David. This information which I’am asking for could be of interest not only for people interested in this firy tale island. The common idea was that Alexander sent a mission of Greek force after being advised by Aristotle to take control over Socotra as a source of the best aloe in the world. Sir Toynbee’s version of Alexander’s attampt to selve “ the Olympias problem ” by sending her to Socotra presents a new look at this historical semi-legendary event.
The Toynbee’s article name in Russian translation sounds like “When (If) Alexander Did not Die So Early..” and was first published in Russian in a popular magazine “Znaniye-Sila” in Moscow in December 1979 (I just have found it in the web).
The publication in buzzle.com is mine: I’ve provided consultations for this serial and did a lot for its interpreter- hero “to be born”. However the final result was even better than I could expect.
Now I know what you are referring to! This essay is in a book called Some Problems of Greek History, Oxford University Press, 1969. If I owned it, I would scan this part for you, but I assume that the Russian version you have found is adequate.
I will send it if I get hold of it, but it sounds like part of a speculation, and therefore not fact. Please send me a text by you about Socotra. I would be delighted to post it here from you as a “guest contributor”, if you agree.
By the way, Toynbee declined a knighthood, so he is not Sir.
Thank you a lot. And shall be very pleased to have this text even a frgment of it connected with the issue of Socotra – I actually like to post this rare information to Socotrans now interested in their ancient history.
I also replied to you on the site: thank you a lot for informing me about this Toynbee’s essay. In fact, the island of beauty and unreal nature is turning from May till October in a terrible place with the season winds. In the rest of times it was a real fairy tale when I visited it long time ago. Now I am an independent Soqotri language and folklore researcher living in Moscow, Russia. With some Socotran genuine fairy tales collected, translated and published by me in Russian, English and German. As well as a little nomber of scientific publications of Soqotran texts with translation and comments in English (CLN, Folia Orientalia – in print).
I like to make this Toynbee’s fragment connecting Socotra known to the modern Socotrans who now like to know their history as well.

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