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Samuel A. Portnoy, American historian of Jewish and East European history [38] George Posener, French Egyptologist [2] Michael Postan, British historian (Jewish Year Book 1985 p. 188) Joshua Prawer, Israeli historian of the kingdom of Jerusalem and the crusades [2] Alfred Francis Pribram , Anglo-Austrian diplomatic historian. [39]
Joseph Jacobs, [16] editor of the Jewish Encyclopedia; Gabriel Kolko; Bernard Lewis [17] Deborah Lipstadt [18] John Lukacs, Hungarian-born historian [19] Erwin Panofsky [20] Richard Popkin, historian of philosophy [21] Meyer Schapiro [22] Rosa Levin Toubin, historian of Jewish Texan history [23] Barbara Tuchman [24] Ron Unz, historian and ...
Modern Jewish historiography is the development of the Jewish historical narrative into the modern era.While Jewish oral history and the collection of commentaries in the Midrash and Talmud are ancient, with the rise of the printing press and movable type in the early modern period, Jewish histories and early editions of the Torah/Tanakh were published which dealt with the history of the ...
The American Historical Association's Guide to Historical Literature, ed. by Mary Beth Norton and Pamela Gerardi (3rd ed. 2 vol, Oxford UP, 1995), 2064 pages; annotated guide to 27,000 of the most important English language history books in all fields and topics vol 1 online, vol 2 online. Allison, William Henry et al. eds.
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:American historians. It includes American historians that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Contents
The Society's Loeb Portrait Database of American Jewish Portraits is a repository of more than 400 portraits of pre-1865 American Jews. [14] The Society also maintains the Jewish-American Hall of Fame, which was founded in 1969 at the Judah L. Magnes Museum in Berkeley, California, and became part of the American Jewish Historical Society in ...
Raphael Patai says that in the conclusion of his book, Yerushalmi predicts that Jewish history—with modern Jewish historical research dating from the 1880s—will never replace Jewish memory and there will be a time when a "new consciousness will prevail that will wonder why so many of us were immersed in history." [7]
David B. Ruderman is the Joseph Meyerhoff Professor of Modern Jewish History at the University of Pennsylvania, Emeritus. [1] From 1994 to 2014 he was the Ella Darivoff Director of Penn's Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, where he also held a fellowship from 2017 to 2018.