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  1. Nicholas Mosley, 3rd Baron Ravensdale, MC, FRSL (25 June 1923 – 28 February 2017), was a British peer, novelist and biographer, including that of his father, Sir Oswald Mosley, the founder of the British Union of Fascists.

  2. 1 mar 2017 · Nicholas Mosley, the writer, 7th Baronet and 3rd Lord Ravensdale, who has died aged 93, spent his life coming to terms with the legacies left him by his father, the Fascist leader Sir...

    • Nicholas Mosley, 3rd Baron Ravensdale1
    • Nicholas Mosley, 3rd Baron Ravensdale2
    • Nicholas Mosley, 3rd Baron Ravensdale3
    • Nicholas Mosley, 3rd Baron Ravensdale4
    • Nicholas Mosley, 3rd Baron Ravensdale5
  3. The third Mosley baronetcy, of Ancoats, in the County of Lancaster, was created in the Baronetage of Great Britain on 8 June 1781 for John Mosley, who was a second cousin of the second and third baronets of the 1720 creation.

  4. Baron Ravensdale, of Ravensdale in the County of Derby, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created in 1911 for the Conservative politician George Curzon, 1st Baron Curzon, of Kedleston, who had previously served as Viceroy of India.

  5. 28 feb 2017 · Nicholas Mosley was the novelist son of the British fascist leader Oswald Mosley and stepson of Diana Mitford. He was a man, as the Booker Prize found out, who stuck to his guns. Mosley, Third Baron Ravensdale, who died in 2017, won the Military Cross during the war and later wrote a highly critical account of his controversial father.

  6. Though he was hilarious, and facetious, there was nothing trivial about Nicholas Mosley. The huge themes of life and death, the meaning of science, the destiny of the human race in the confusion of modern times, these were the subjects of his books, and of his talk.

  7. Nicholas Mosley. (b. 1923) Quick Reference. (1923– ), novelist and biographer, educated at Balliol College, Oxford. His highly intellectual, experimental, and metaphysical novels include Accident (1964); Impossible Object (1968); Natalie Natalia (1971); Catastrophe Practice (1979); Imago Bird (1980); Judith (1986); and Inventing God (2003).