The late John Burrow, one of the most stimulating promoters of the distinctively interdisciplinary
enterprise that is Intellectual History, was a vital member of what has become known as the ‘Sussex
School’. In exploring the resonances of his singular and richly idiosyncratic contribution, this article
places his unique historical sensibility within a series of interpretative contexts, demonstrating the
vitality of writings that will continue to inspire and inform scholarship in the field for decades to come.
Keywords:
The Sussex School
,The Cambridge School
,Intellectual History
,A second identity
,Historicism
,Friedrich Meinecke
,A.D. Nuttall
,Virtue
,Sensibility