Nicholas Hagger


Nicholas Hagger is a British poet, writer, cultural historian, and philosopher, and a major proponent of philosophical Universalism.
Hagger was educated at Oaklands School in Loughton, Essex and at Chigwell School, Essex, where he read Classics. He attended Worcester College, Oxford, where he read English Literature under Christopher Ricks.
He was Lecturer at the University of Baghdad, Iraq, from 1961 to 1962; held various lecturing posts at the University of Tokyo, Tokyo University of Education and Keio University, a combined post, where he was also Visiting Foreign Professor; and was a Lecturer at the University of Libya, Tripoli from 1968 to 1970. He was also Tutor to Emperor Hirohito’s second son, Masahito, Prince Hitachi from 1964 until 1967. He wrote for The Times and taught in London. Hagger acquired four schools and set up the Oak-Tree Group of Schools. He bought Otley Hall in Otley, Suffolk and for seven years ran it as a historic house.
Hagger is the author of 50 books, including 2,000 poems and 1,200 short stories. Hagger's philosophical Universalism seeks to reflect the universe as a whole in seven disciplines. His books present the fundamental theme of all world literature , history, philosophy, mysticism and religion, international politics and statecraft and world culture.
He lives in Essex and now devotes the greater part of his life to writing. In November 2016 Hagger was awarded the Gusi Peace Prize for Literature. In 2019, he also received the Golden Phoenix medal of the Russian Ecological Foundation. He is on the Board of Advisors of the recently established Galileo Commission, which seeks to expand the scope of science.
The University of Essex has Hagger's archive of literary works on permanent deposit as a Special Collection in the Albert Sloman Library.

Publications