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Keith Sinclair

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Nationality
  
New Zealand

Died
  
June 20, 1993, Canada

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Keith Sinclair

Occupation
  
historian, poet


Keith Sinclair wwwpressaucklandacnzcontentdamuoapressaut

Born
  
5 December 1922 (
1922-12-05
)
Auckland, New Zealand

Children
  
Stephen Sinclair, Harry Sinclair

Education
  
Mount Albert Grammar School, University of Auckland

Books
  
A History of New Zealand, The Origins of the Maori Wars, Kinds of Peace: Maori Pe, Walter Nash, A Destiny Apart: New Zealand's

Similar People
  
Stephen Sinclair, Harry Sinclair, Marcia Stenson, Rebecca Rand Kirshner, Robert Kirshner

Sir Keith Sinclair, CBE (5 December 1922 – 20 June 1993) was a poet and noted historian of New Zealand.

Contents

Academic career

Born and raised in Auckland, Sinclair was a student at Auckland University College, which was then part of the University of New Zealand. He was awarded a Ph.D. at the College and was made a professor of history at the University of Auckland in 1963.

In 1966, Sinclair and fellow lecturer Bob Chapman established The University of Auckland Art Collection, beginning with the purchase of several paintings and drawings by Colin McCahon. The Collection is now managed by the Centre for Art Research, based at the Gus Fisher Gallery.

Sinclair won widespread acclaim for his first book of history, The Origins of the Maori Wars (1957). His next book, A History of New Zealand (1959), is often regarded as a classic in New Zealand history. The book remains in print, being revised several times, the last, with additions by fellow academic Raewyn Dalziel, in 2000. In 1967 he founded the New Zealand Journal of History.

In both his poetry and his work as a historian, Sinclair was a nationalist, in the sense that he was concerned with forging a national identity for New Zealand that was independent of its colonial origins.

Political life

In the 1969 general election he was the Labour Party candidate for Eden. He won the electorate on the night, but was defeated 3 weeks later on the final count (including special votes) by only 67 votes. Later he wrote an acclaimed biography of Labour Prime Minister Walter Nash who had left his vast personal archives at Sinclair's disposal. The book won the 1977 National Book Award.

Later life

Sinclair was awarded a CBE in 1983 and knighted for services to history in 1985. He then taught history at the University of Auckland until his retirement in 1987. Halfway Round the Harbour, an autobiography, was published posthumously in 1993.

In 2003, the University of Auckland established the Keith Sinclair Chair in History in his honour. In 2005, he was named one of New Zealand's Top 100 History Makers.

One of his sons is the actor Harry Sinclair; another, Stephen, is a New Zealand playwright and poet.

References

Keith Sinclair Wikipedia