Everything about Halford Mackinder totally explained
Sir
Halford John Mackinder PC (
February 15 1861 –
March 6 1947), was an
English geographer and
geopolitician.
He was educated at Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Gainsborough (now
Queen Elizabeth's High School),
Epsom College and
Christ Church, Oxford. At Oxford he started studying natural sciences, specialising in
zoology under
Henry Nottidge Moseley, who had been the naturalist on
Challenger expedition. When he turned to the study of history, he remarked that he was returning "to an old interest and took up modern history with the idea of seeing how the theory of evolution would appear in human development". He specialised as a physical geographer, later branching into
economics and
political theory, arguing that physical and human
geography should be treated as a single discipline.
Work and achievements
- In 1887 he was appointed Reader in Geography at the University of Oxford, then by far the most senior position for a British geographer, announcing: "A platform has been given to a geographer." By 1899 he'd drawn together a single School of Geography.
- In 1899 he climbed Mt. Kenya.
- In 1902 the publication of "Britain and The British Seas", which included the first comprehensive geomorphology of Great Britain, and in which he described Britain as 'a lump of coal surrounded by fish'.
- In 1895, he was one of the founders of the London School of Economics.
- He was a member of the Coefficients dining club of social reformers set up in 1902 by the Fabian campaigners Sidney and Beatrice Webb.
- In 1904 Mackinder gave a paper on "The Geographical Pivot of History" at the Royal Geographical Society, in which he formulated the Heartland Theory. This is often considered as a, if not the, founding moment of Geopolitics, as a field of study, although Mackinder didn't use the term. Whilst the Heartland Theory initially receiving little attention outside geography, this theory would influence the foreign policies of world powers ever since.
- He helped found the University of Reading in 1892, and the Geographical Association in 1893 which promoted (and promotes) the teaching of geography in schools. He was GAs chair from 1913 to 1946 and President from 1916.
- He was knighted in 1920.
Possibly disappointed at not getting a full Chair, Mackinder left Oxford and became director of the
London School of Economics between 1903 and 1908. After 1908, he concentrated on advocating the cause of imperial unity and only was involved in lecturing part-time. He was elected to Parliament in January
1910 as
Unionist Party member for the
Glasgow Camlachie constituency and was defeated in
1922.
His next major work was in
1919 -
Democratic Ideals and Reality
- was a perspective on the 1904 work in the light of peace treaties and
Woodrow Wilson's idealism. This contains his most famous quote:
"Who rules East Europe commands the Heartland; Who rules the heartland commands the World Island; Who rules the World Island commands the World." This message was composed for world statesmen at the
Treaty of Versailles; the emphasis on East Europe as the strategic route to the Heartland was interpreted as requiring a strip of buffer state to separate Germany and Russia. These were created by the peace negotiators but proved to be ineffective bulwarks in 1939. Although Mackinder was anti-
Bolshevik (as British
High Commissioner he tried to unite the
White Russian forces), the principal concern of his work was to warn of the possibility of another major war (a warning also given by
economist John Maynard Keynes).
Enter the Nazis
The Heartland Theory was enthusiastically taken up by the German school of
Geopolitik, in particular by its main proponent
Karl Haushofer. Whilst
Geopolitik was later embraced by the
German Nazi regime in the
1930s, Mackinder was always extremely critical of the
German exploitation of his ideas. The German interpretation of the Heartland Theory is referred to explicitly (without mentioning the connection to Mackinder) in
The Nazis Strike, the second of
Frank Capra's
Why We Fight series of
American World War II propaganda films.
The importance of Mackinder
Mackinder's work paved the way for the establishment of geography as a distinct discipline in the United Kingdom. Oxford wouldn't appoint a Chair until 1934, but the
University of Liverpool and
University of Wales, Aberystwyth both appointed Chairs in 1917. Mackinder was given a personal chair at the
London School of Economics in 1923. His role in fostering the teaching of geography is probably greater than any single British geographer.
Mackinder on geography
"The science whose main function is to trace the interaction of man in society and as much of his environment and as varies locally."
"The science of distribution. The science, that is, which traces the arrangement of things in general on the Earth's surface."
Mackinder is also credited with introducing two new terms into the dictionary : "manpower", "heartland".
Further Information
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