List of Jewish historians
A list of Jewish historians:
A
- David Abulafia, professor of history, University of Cambridge (Jewish Year Book 2005, p. 218)
- Ignac Acsady, Hungarian social and economic historian[1]
- Howard Adelson, U.S. mediaeval historian[1]
- Cyrus Adler,[2] U.S. historian of Jewish history
- Geoffrey Alderman,[3] historian
- Mor Altshuler, Israeli historian of early Hasidism, Kabbalism, and Jewish messianism
- Herbert Aptheker, leader in Communist Party, historian[4]
- Yehoshua Arieli, Israeli historian[1]
- Walter Leonard Arnstein, U.S. historian[1]
- Raymond Aron, French historian of sociology[1]
- Robert Aron, French author and journalist[1]
- David Asheri, Israeli classical historian[1]
- Simon Ashkenazi, Polish modern European history[1]
- David Ayalon, Israeli historian of Islam and Judaism[1]
B
- Bernard Bailyn, U.S. Colonial historian[1]
- Richard Barnett, museum curator and archaeologist (JYB 1985 p. 187)
- Salo Wittmayer Baron, American historian of Polish-Austrian Jewish ancestry
- Omer Bartov, U.S. historian of World War II and Polish Jews
- George Louis Beer, U.S. historian of 16th-19th century commerce[1]
- Emile-Auguste Begin, French physician, historian and librarian[1]
- Max Beloff, English historian and political scientist[1]
- Joaquim Bensaude Portuguese historian of astronomy and navigation[1]
- Norman Bentwich, British lawyer and historian[5]
- Israil Bercovici, Romanian playwright and historian [6]
- Jay R. Berkovitz, U.S. historian of Jews in France and early modern Europe
- Harry Bernstein, U.S. historian[1]
- Elias Joseph Bickerman, U.S. scholar of ancient history[1]
- Camille Bloch, French historian, archivist and librarian[1]
- Gustave Bloch, French Graeco-Roman historian[1]
- Herbert Bloch, German-born American classicist
- Marc Bloch, French historian of medieval France[1]
- Solomon Frank Bloom, U.S. historian of modern Europe[1]
- Jerome Blum, U.S. historian[1]
- Daniel Boorstin, U.S. historian; official historian at the Smithsonian Institution & the Library of Congress[1][7]
- Woodrow Wilson Borah, U.S. historian[1]
- Ambrosio Brandao, Portuguese historian and soldier[1]
- Harry Bresslau, German historian[1]
- Berthold Bretholz, Moravian historian[1]
- Jacob Bronowski, historian of science [8]
- Robert Brunschvig, French historian of Islam[1]
- Max Buedinger, German modern European historian[1]
C
- Norman Cantor, mediaeval historian[1][9]
- Achille Coen, Italian historian[1]
- David Cohen, Dutch historian and Jewish leader[1]
- Gustave Cohen, Belgian historian of mediaeval French literature and theatre[1]
- Mark Cohen, American historian of the Jews under medieval Islam
- Robert Cohen, French historian of ancient Greece[1]
- Michael Confino, Israeli historian[1]
D
- Robert Davidsohn, German historian of mediaeval Florence[1]
- Hermann Dessau, German historian and philologist[1]
- Isaac Deutscher, Polish-born British Marxist historian and political scientist[1]
- Max Dimont, Finnish-American Jew and popular historian and author
- Martin Duberman, U.S. historian and playwright[1]
- Ariel Durant, American historian; author of The Story of Civilization.[10]
E
- Ludwig Edelstein, ancient medicine
- Victor Ehrenberg, German historian of the ancient world[1]
- Louis Eisenman, French historian of Europe[1]
- Abraham Eisenstadt, U.S. historian[1]
- Stanley Elkins, U.S. historian[1]
- Amos Elon, Vienna-born Israeli. Historian of Germany and modern Israel
- Sir Geoffrey Rudolph Elton, German-born British historian of Tudor England[1]
- Carlo Errera, Italian geographer and historian of exploration[1]
- Richard Ettinghausen, German-born U.S. art historian[11]
F
- Louis Filler, U.S. historian[1]
- Sidney Fine, U.S. historian[1]
- Samuel Finer, British political scientist and historian [12]
- Sir Moses I. Finley, Classical Historian.[13]
- Robert Fogel, American economic historian and Nobel laureate [14]
- Eric Foner, American historian and president of American Historical Association 2000
- Heinrich Friedjung, Moravian historian and politician[1]
- Henry Friedlander, German-born American historian of the Holocaust
- Saul Friedländer, Czech-born French-Israeli historian of the Holocaust[1]
- Yisrael Friedman, former lecturer at the Tel Aviv University and the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
- Alexander Fuks, Israeli classical historian[1]
G
- Peter Gay, German-born American historian of ideas[1]
- Leo Gershoy, U.S. historian[1]
- Felix Gilbert, U.S. political historian[1]
- Sir Martin Gilbert, British historian.[15]
- Carlo Ginzburg, Italian historian
- Gustave Glotz, French ancient Greek historian[1]
- Eric F. Goldman, U.S. modern historian[1]
- Yosef Goldman, author of Hebrew Printing in America[16]
- Sir Ernst Gombrich, Austrian-born British art historian[17]
- Martin Goodman (historian) (Jewish Year Book 2005 p. 215)
- Louis Reichenthal Gottschalk, U.S. historian of modern Europe[1]
- Philip Guedalla, biographer [18]
- Hans G. Guterbock, German-born hittitologist
H
- Elie Halevy, French historian, "A History of the English People in the 19th century 1915-30"
- George W. F. Hallgarten, historian[19]
- Louis Halphen, French mediaevalist[1]
- Theodore Stephen Hamerow, U.S. historian[1]
- Marceli Handelsman, Polish constitutional and political historian[1]
- Oscar Handlin, U.S. social historian[1]
- Henry Harrisse, U.S. historiographer[1]
- Ludo Moritz Hartmann, Austrian historian and statesman[1]
- Henri Hauser, French ancient and mediaeval historian[1]
- Sigmund Herzberg-Fraenkel, Austrian historian[1]
- Jack H. Hexter, U.S. historian of modern Europe[1]
- Uriel Heyd, Israeli historian of Islam[1]
- Raul Hilberg, Austrian-born American Holocaust historian[20]
- Gertrude Himmelfarb, American historian of Victorian Britain[1]
- Heinrich Otto Hirschfield, German Roman historian[1]
- Eric Hobsbawm, Egyptian-born British Marxist historian[1]
- Richard Hofstadter, U.S. political historian[1]
- Samuel Justin Hurwitz, U.S. historian[1]
- Harold Melvin Hyman, U.S. historian[1]
I
- Siegfried Isaacsohn, German historian[1]
- Jonathan Israel, British historian (Jewish Year Book 2005, p. 215)
J
- Joseph Jacobs , editor of the Jewish Encyclopedia
- Oscar Isaiah Janowsky, U.S. historian of modern Europe and Jews[1]
- Lisa Jardine, British historian (ref see List of British Jews#Historians)
- Louis de Jong, Dutch historian and journalist[1]
- Matthew Josephson, U.S. social historian[1]
- Titus Flavius Josephus, Ancient Jewish Historian
K
- Ernst Kantorowicz, German-born American mediaevalist[1]
- Solomon Katz, U.S. historian[1]
- Elie Kedourie, Iraq-born British historian (Jewish Year Book 1990 p. 202)
- Morton Keller, U.S. historian[1]
- Abraham Khalfon, Jewish historian of Tripoli[21]
- James Klugmann, communist historian [22]
- Richard Koebner, Israeli German historian[1]
- Hans Kohn, U.S. political and social historian[1]
- Michael Kraus, U.S. historian[1]
- Leonard Krieger, U.S. historian[1]
- Hyman Kublin, U.S. historian of the far east[1]
- Thomas Samuel Kuhn, U.S. historian of science[1]
- Otto Kurz, historian (Jewish Year Book 1975 p. 214)
L
- Gyula Lanczy, Hungarian economic historian[1]
- David Landes, U.S. economic historian[1]
- Benno Landsberger, Austrian-born assyriologist
- Max Laserson, Latvian historian[1]
- Sir Sidney Lee, second editor of the Dictionary of National Biography [23]
- Max Lerner, U.S. journalist and social historian[1]
- Joseph Levenson, U.S. specialist in Chinese history[1]
- Wilhelm Levison, German mediaevalist[1]
- Arthur Levy, French historian[1]
- Leonard William Levy, U.S. political historian[1]
- Paul Levy, French linguistic historian[1]
- Bernard Lewis, British orientalist, History of Islam[1][24]
- David Malcolm Lewis, British historian. (Jewish Year Book 1995 p. 193)
- Felix Liebermann, German mediaevalist[1]
- Ephraim Lipson, British economic historian[1]
- Deborah Lipstadt, U.S. Holocaust historian[25]
- Victor Loewe, German historian and archivist[1]
- Robert Sabatino Lopez, U.S. mediaevalist[1]
- Sidney Low, British statesman, journalist and political historian[1]
- Samuel Lozinski, Russian historian[1]
- John Lukacs, Hungarian-US historian [26]
- Alberto Lumbroso, Italian historian of the Napoleonic period[1]
- Giacomo Lumbroso, Italian classical historian and archaeologist[1]
M
- Hyam Maccoby [27]
- Sir Philip Magnus-Allcroft, 2nd Baronet, biographer [28]
- Frank Manuel, U.S. historian[1]
- Henrik Marczali, Hungarian historian[1]
- Shula Marks, South African-British expert on African history (Jewish Year Book 2005 p. 215)
- Ludwig Markus, German expert in Abyssinian and Beta Israeli history[1]
- Arno J. Mayer, Luxembourg-born American historian[1]
- Gustav Mayer, German political and social historian[1]
- Mark Borisovich Mitin, Russian politician and historian[1]
- Arnaldo Momigliano, Italian-British historian.(Jewish Year Book 1985 p. 188)
- Felice Momigliano, Italian philosopher and historian[1]
- Richard Brandon Morris, U.S. constitutional historian[1]
- Louis C. Morton, U.S. historian[1]
- George Mosse, German-born American historian of ideas[1]
- Gustavus Myers, U.S. social historian[1]
N
- Nadav Na`aman, Israeli historian of biblical times
- Oskar Nachod, German historian and bibliographer[1]
- Lewis Bernstein Namier, Polish-born British historian
- Alexander Nove, economic historian (Jewish Year Book 1990 p. 202)
O
- Julius Oppert, Assyriologist
- Michael Oren, Israeli historian
O
- Leo Oppenheim, Assyriologist
P
- Sir Francis Palgrave, British historian[1]
- Erwin Panofsky, German-born American art historian[29]
- Ilan Pappé, Israeli historian[1]
- Max Perlbach, German mediaevalist[1]
- Martin Phillipson, German modern historian and communal leader[1]
- Koppel Pinson, U.S. political and social historian[1]
- Richard Pipes, Polish-born American historian of Russia[1]
- Karl Polanyi, economist and historian [30]
- Sidney Pomerantz, U.S. historian[1]
- Richard Popkin, historian of philosophy [31]
- Samuel A. Portnoy, American historian of Jewish and East European history [32]
- George Posener, French Egyptologist[1]
- Sir Michael Postan, British historian. (Jewish Year Book 1985 p. 188)
- Joshua Prawer, Israeli historian of the kingdom of Jerusalem and the crusades[1]
- Alfred Francis Pribram (de), Anglo-Austrian diplomatic historian.[33]
- Alfred Pribram, Austrian historian and publicist[1]
- Jacob Psantir, Rumanian historian of the Jews[1]
R
- Theodore Rabb, Renaissance historian[1]
- Armin Rappaport, U.S. historian[1]
- Sidney Ratner, U.S. economic historian[1]
- Ludwig Riess, German constitutional historian[1]
- Samuele Romanin, Italian historian of classical Rome and Judaism[1]
- Nello Roselli, Italian historian[1]
- Ron Rosenbaum, American historian-journalist, author of Explaining Hitler (1998)
- Arthur Rosenberg, German historian and Zionist[1]
- Nathan Rosenstein, American historian of the Roman Republic -->
- Michael Alan Ross, American writer and author of BostonWalks The Jewish Friendship Trail Guidebook[34]
- Cecil Roth, British historian[35] and editor of the Encyclopaedia Judaica
S
- Julius Salomon, Danish historian and archivist[1]
- Simon Schama, British historian[36]
- J. Salwyn Schapiro, American historian of modern Europe[1]
- Leonard Schapiro,[37] historian
- Meyer Schapiro, Lithuanian-born American art historian[38]
- David Schoenbaum, modern German history
- Moses Schorr, historian of Polish Jews
- Hugh Sebag-Montefiore, British World War 2 historian[39]
- Simon Sebag Montefiore, British historian of Russia[40]
- Tom Segev, Israeli historian
- Arturo Segre, Italian political and commercial historian[1]
- Avraham Sela, Israeli historian
- Bernard Semmel, U.S. historian[1]
- Moshe Shamir, Israeli writer and historian
- Avi Shlaim, Israeli historian
- Joseph Shulim, U.S. historian[1]
- Bernhard von Simson, German mediaevalist[1]
- Paul Simson, German historian[1]
- Charles Singer, British historian of science and medicine[1]
- Ephraim Avigdor Speiser, American assyriologist and archeologist
- Louis Snyder, U.S. historian[1]
- Arthur Stein, Austrian historian of classical Rome[1]
- Sir Aurel Stein , archeologist
- Henri Stein, French bibliographer and historian[1]
- Samuel Steinherz, Czechoslovakian mediaevalist[1]
- Alfred Stern, Swiss social historian[1]
- Barry Supple, British economic historian (Jewish Year Book, 2005, p. 215)
T
- Jacob Talmon, Israeli political and social historian[1]
- Frank Tannenbaum, U.S. economic historian[1]
- Rosa Levin Toubin, Jewish Texan historian[1]
- Hans Trefousse, U.S. historian[1]
- Barbara Tuchman, U.S. journalist and historian[1][41]
U
- Irwin Unger, U.S. political and social historian[1]
V
- Geza Vermes, Hungarian-born British historian[42]
W
- Bernard Weisberger, U.S. historian[1]
- Eduard Wertheimer, Hungarian historian of the 19th century[1]
- Helene Wieruszowski, German-U.S. historian[1]
- Mordecai Wilensky, American/Israeli historian of Jewish history
- Bertram Wolfe, U.S. Soviet historian[1]
- Leonard Woolf, British historian of economics[1]
Y
- Zvy Yavetz, Israeli historian of ancient Rome -->
- Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi (1932-2009), Jewish History, Culture & Society -->
- Aryeh Yitzhaki, Israeli historian -->
Z
- Oscar Zeichner, U.S. historian[1]
- Alfred Zimmern, British political scientist and authority on International Relations[1]
- Carl A. Zimring, American environmental historian
- Howard Zinn, American historian[43]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 (EJL)
- ↑ Encyclopaedia Judaica, art. Adler, Cyrus
- ↑ "her father, Geoffrey Alderman, is a columnist for the Jewish Chronicle, and her family are strict Orthodox Jews" Accessed 3 Jan 2007
- ↑ "And I'm Jewish. I was about to go to Command and General Staff School and be promoted..." (subscription needed to view full text)
- ↑ Encyclopaedia Judaica, art. Bentwich
- ↑ http://www2.trincoll.edu/~mendele/ytf/ytf02006.htm
- ↑ j. - Celebrity Jews: Rich Guys Donate
- ↑
- ↑ "Cantor, himself Jewish, took on the "ruling circles of the American and Israeli Jewish communities"."
- ↑ "later known as Ariel (1898-1981), a Russian Jewish immigrant and talented student..."
- ↑ http://www.dictionaryofarthistorians.org/ettinghausenr.htm, "Both a Jew and an avid Islamicist"
- ↑ Jewish Chronicle obituary, June 25, 1993, p.15
- ↑ Encyclopaedia Judaica, 2nd ed.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Hooked On American Jewish History
- ↑
- ↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: "He was buried in Golders Green Jewish cemetery"
- ↑ "The German-Jewish historian, George Hallgarten"
- ↑ Encyclopaedia Judaica, art. Hilberg, Raul
- ↑ Meddeb, Abdelwahab; Stora, Benjamin, eds. (2013). A History of Jewish-Muslim Relations: From the origins to the present day. Princeton University Press. p. 237. ISBN 0-691-15127-X.
- ↑ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "son of Jewish parents"
- ↑
- ↑ "He is Jewish, a native of London, in his 80s."
- ↑ "Lipstadt, the American Jewish academic who exposes Holocaust deniers ..."
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Encyclopaedia Judaica, art. "Magnus"
- ↑ "Erwin Panofsky (1892-1968), another Jewish scholar associated with the Warburg Library, was the most illustrious art historian who found refuge in America." (subscription needed to view)
- ↑
- ↑ Encyclopaedia Judaica, art. "Philosophy"
- ↑
- ↑ Almanach für das Jahr 1949, 99. Band, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, In Kommission bei R. M. Rohrer.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "born in Glasgow of an anglophile Riga Jewish family"
- ↑ "An archetypal Jewish immigrant"
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "American Jewish historian Barbara Tuchman was born in New York City"
- ↑
- ↑ ""The Corporation," the lineup was a quartet of four Jewish left intellectuals, including Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn..."
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