ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA

 Bloomsbury group

 Name given to a coterie of English writers, philosophers, and artists who frequently
 met between about 1907 and 1930 at the houses of Clive and Vanessa Bell and of
 Vanessa's brother and sister Adrian and Virginia Stephen (later Virginia Woolf) in
 the Bloomsbury district of London, the area around the British Museum. They
 discussed aesthetic and philosophical questions in a spirit of agnosticism and were
 strongly influenced by G.E. Moore's Principia Ethica (1903) and by A.N. Whitehead's
 and Bertrand Russell's Principia Mathematica (1910-13), in the light of which they
 searched for definitions of the good, the true, and the beautiful and questioned
 accepted ideas with a "comprehensive irreverence" for all kinds of sham.

 Nearly all the male members of the group had been at Trinity or King's College,
 Cambridge, with Leslie Stephen's son Thoby, who had introduced them to his
 sisters Vanessa and Virginia. Most of them had been "Apostles"; i.e., members of
 the "society," a select, semisecret university club for the discussion of serious
 questions, founded at Cambridge in the late 1820s by J.F.D. Maurice and John
 Sterling. Tennyson, Arthur Hallam, Edward Fitzgerald, and Leslie Stephen had all
 been Apostles. In the early 1900s, when those who later formed the core of the
 Bloomsbury group were elected to the society, the literary critic Lowes Dickinson,
 the philosophers Henry Sidgwick, J.M.E. McTaggart, A.N. Whitehead, G.E. Moore,
 and the art critic Roger Fry, who became one of the Bloomsbury group himself,
 were members.

 The Bloomsbury group included the novelist E.M. Forster, the biographer Lytton
 Strachey, the art critic Clive Bell, the painters Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, the
 economist John Maynard Keynes, the Fabian writer Leonard Woolf, and the novelist
 and critic Virginia Woolf. Other members were Desmond Macarthy, Arthur Waley,
 Saxon Sidney-Turner, Robert Trevelyan, Francis Birrell, J.T. Sheppard (later
 provost of King's College), and the critic Raymond Mortimer and the sculptor
 Stephen Tomlin, both Oxford men. Bertrand Russell, Aldous Huxley, and T.S. Eliot
 were sometimes associated with the group, as was the economist Gerald Shove.
 The group survived World War I but by the early 1930s had ceased to exist in its
 original form, having by that time merged with the general intellectual life of
 London, Oxford, and Cambridge. Although its members shared certain ideas and
 values, the Bloomsbury group did not constitute a school. Its significance lies in
 the extraordinary number of talented persons associated with it.
 

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