Donald Attwater


Donald Attwater was a British Catholic author, editor and translator, and a visiting lecturer at the University of Notre Dame.

Life

Attwater was born in Essex, England, on 24 December 1892. His parents were Methodists who became Anglicans while Attwater was a child. He himself became a Catholic at the age of 18. He studied Law but did not earn a degree.
He served in the Sinai and Palestine campaign during the First World War, developing an interest in Eastern Christianity while in the Middle East. After the war, he lived for a time on Caldey Island, undergoing the influence of the monks of Caldey Abbey. He also became a friend and admirer of Eric Gill. Throughout the 1930s, 40s and 50s he was a frequent contributor to the Catholic press in both Britain and America, and a prolific author of books on Christian themes.
In 1936, he was one of the founders of the Catholic peace movement Pax, which opposed the invasion of Abyssinia by Fascist Italy.
Attwater was married to Rachel Attwater of South Wales, a fellow historian and published author on Catholic saints in the Orient. He died in Storrington, Sussex, in February 1977.

Writings

;As author
;As translator
;As editor
  • A Catholic Encyclopedic Dictionary
  • Dictionary of Saints ; later Penguin Dictionary of Saints
  • Butler's Lives of the Saints, a revision of Herbert Thurston's edition.
  • ''Modern Christian Revolutionaries''