Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
1897
Aristocratic upbringing
Anthony Eden's early life belonged to the old governing Britain: country houses, elite schooling, classical education, and an assumption that public service was a natural duty. Yet he was not merely a decorative aristocrat. He was serious, disciplined, and unusually drawn to languages and foreign affairs. The First World War intervened before that world could continue unchanged. Eden's generation carried the burden of seeing inherited confidence tested by industrial slaughter. That experience gave him a lifelong belief that diplomacy mattered because failed diplomacy killed. It also created a moral seriousness that later made his Suez decisions feel, to him, like resistance to aggression rather than imperial nostalgia.
His early environment instilled both confidence and obligation, forming the foundation of a career rooted in duty rather than ambition alone.
1915–1918
First World War service
Eden joined the King's Royal Rifle Corps and served with distinction on the Western Front, becoming one of the youngest brigade majors in the British Army. The war marked him personally as well as politically: two of his brothers died, and he saw the consequences of strategic failure at close range. Unlike some later appeasers, Eden did not draw from 1914-1918 the conclusion that almost any concession was preferable to conflict. He came to believe that aggression had to be recognised early and handled firmly, because delay could make war worse. This conviction gave him moral clarity in the 1930s. It would later become dangerous when he applied the memory of fascist aggression too mechanically to Gamal Abdel Nasser.
Direct exposure to war gave him a lifelong urgency about preventing conflict, even if his later actions sometimes contradicted that instinct.
1923
Entry into politics
Eden's parliamentary rise was built on expertise rather than demagoguery. He studied languages, travelled, followed European diplomacy closely, and became one of the Conservative Party's most promising younger figures on foreign policy. In an age when Britain was trying to preserve peace through the League of Nations while managing imperial commitments and European instability, Eden looked like a new kind of Tory internationalist: polished, serious, and alert to the dangers of dictatorship. His fluency in diplomatic detail made him valuable to senior governments, and by the early 1930s he was moving rapidly toward office.
He built influence quietly, proving that steady competence could be as powerful as charisma in political advancement.
1930s
Foreign policy focus
Eden's reputation was made by the crisis years before the Second World War. As Foreign Secretary, he confronted the breakdown of collective security after Mussolini's invasion of Ethiopia, Hitler's expansion, and the weakness of League diplomacy. He was not reckless, but he grew increasingly uncomfortable with policies that treated dictators as ordinary negotiators. In 1938 he resigned after disagreements with Neville Chamberlain, especially over how to deal with Italy. The resignation gave him lasting credit among those who later saw appeasement as moral failure. Eden became the Conservative who had warned, or at least resisted, before catastrophe confirmed the danger.
His early warnings showed foresight, but they also revealed a tendency toward rigid conviction under pressure.
1935–1940, 1940–1945
Foreign Secretary role
During the Second World War, Eden became one of Churchill's indispensable ministers. Foreign policy required managing alliances that were essential but uneasy: Roosevelt's United States, Stalin's Soviet Union, governments-in-exile, imperial partners, and emerging postwar plans. Eden was not the dominant personality Churchill was, but he supplied professionalism, continuity, and diplomatic discipline. He also saw how Britain's position was changing. Victory depended increasingly on American power and Soviet sacrifice, while the empire's future looked less secure. Eden's wartime service enhanced his stature, but it also trapped him in a paradox: he helped win a war that left Britain victorious yet diminished.
Wartime diplomacy refined his skills but also reinforced a belief in Britain’s enduring global influence.
1950s
Heir apparent
Eden's long apprenticeship was both advantage and curse. He had served at the centre of British diplomacy for decades, and many voters saw him as the obvious successor to Churchill. But waiting so long for power created pressure to prove that he was more than an elegant deputy. His health was fragile after a botched gallbladder operation in 1953, and pain, medication, and exhaustion would later complicate his judgement during crisis. Politically, he inherited a country still adjusting to postwar austerity, American dominance, Soviet rivalry, decolonisation, and the loss of old imperial certainty. He came to office with experience, but not with the world his experience had been formed to manage.
Being the expected successor can limit flexibility, as leadership becomes shaped by expectation rather than reinvention.
1955
Becoming Prime Minister
Eden's premiership began with public confidence. He was experienced, urbane, and seemed a natural continuation of Conservative rule after Churchill. The 1955 general election strengthened his position, but it also raised expectations. Domestic politics offered little room for dramatic reinvention; his authority rested most of all on the belief that he understood the world. That made foreign crisis especially dangerous. Eden had spent his career warning against appeasement and believing that dictators exploited weakness. When Nasser nationalised the Suez Canal in 1956, Eden interpreted the act through that moral and historical lens. The result would destroy him.
Reaching the top changes the nature of decision-making, where experience alone cannot shield a leader from unforeseen consequences.
1956
Suez Crisis
Suez was a strategic crisis, a moral error, and a revelation of Britain's reduced power. Eden believed Nasser's nationalisation of the Suez Canal threatened vital interests and echoed the dictator challenges of the 1930s. Britain, France, and Israel secretly coordinated a plan: Israel would invade Egypt, and Britain and France would intervene as supposed peacekeepers while regaining control of the canal. The deception unravelled quickly. The United States refused to support the operation and applied financial pressure; the Soviet Union issued threats; the United Nations condemned the intervention; and British public opinion split. Militarily, the operation had momentum. Politically, it was unsustainable. Suez showed that Britain could no longer act as an imperial great power against American opposition.
The crisis revealed that past power does not guarantee present control, especially in a shifting international landscape.
1957–1977
Resignation and legacy
Eden left office only months after the Suez invasion, succeeded by Harold Macmillan. His later life, as Earl of Avon, included memoirs and attempts to defend the reasoning behind his actions, but Suez remained the lens through which his career was judged. The tragedy of Eden is that his failure grew from qualities that had once made him admirable: hatred of aggression, belief in resolve, and commitment to Britain's international role. In 1956 those instincts met a changed world and produced miscalculation. His long service as Foreign Secretary, his anti-appeasement reputation, and his wartime diplomacy remain historically significant. Yet the prime minister who thought he was preventing another 1930s became the symbol of Britain's post-imperial limits.
A long career can be judged by its final chapter, even when earlier achievements were substantial.