This is a list of historians categorized by their area of study . See also List of historians and List of women historians by area of study .
Sedat Alp (1913, Veroia, The Ottoman Empire - 2006, Ankara, Türkiye) Hittitolog- Historian, Ancient Anatolian
Ekrem Akurgal (1911, Haifa, The Ottoman Empire- 2002, İzmir, Türkiye) Archaeologist- Historian, Ancient Anatolian
Leonie Archer (born 1955) – Graeco-Roman Palestine
Mary Beard (born 1955)
Anatoly Bokschanin (1903–1979) – Roman history
Fernand Braudel (1902, Luméville-en-Ornois, France - 1985, Cluses, France ) Roman history
Thomas Robert Shannon Broughton (1900–1993) – Roman history and prosopography
Halet Çambel (1916, Berlin, Germany- 2014, İstanbul, Türkiye) Archaeologist- Historian, Ancient Anatolian
Michael Crawford (born 1939)
Roland Étienne (born 1944, French) – Ancient Greece and Hellenistic period
Moses Finley (1912–1986)
Edward Gibbon (1737–1794) – The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
Adrian Goldsworthy (born 1969, British) – Roman history
Peter Green (1924–2024) – Ancient Greece and Macedon
Herodotus
Keith Hopkins (1934–2004) - Roman history
Muazzez İlmiye Çığ (1914–2024, Bursa-Türkiye) Sumerologist, Sumerian history
Josephus
Yuliya Kolosovskaya (1920–2002) – Roman history and Roman provinces of the Danube
Sergey Kovalev (1886–1960) – Hellenistic and Roman period
Mikhail Kublanov (1914–1998)
Barbara Levick (1931–2023) – Roman emperors
Livy
Ramsay MacMullen (1928–2022) – History of Rome
Nikolai Mashkin (1900–1950) – Roman history
Fergus Millar (1935–2019)
Theodor Mommsen (1817–1903) History of Rome
Barthold Georg Niebuhr (1776–1831) – Roman history
Orosius
Tahsin Özgüç (1916, Kardzhali, The Ottoman Empire- 2005, Ankara, Türkiye) Archaeologist- Historian, Ancient Anatolian
Edward Togo Salmon (1905–1988) - Roman history
Howard Hayes Scullard (1903–1983) – Roman civilization
Mariya Sergeyenko (1891–1987) – Roman agriculture and daily life
Ram Sharan Sharma (1919–2011) – Ancient India
Elena Shtaerman (1914–1991) – Roman history
Suetonius
Ronald Syme (1903–1989) – Classical period
Tacitus
Joseph Tainter (born 1949)
Lily Ross Taylor (1886–1969) - Roman history
Thucydides
Andrew Wallace-Hadrill (born 1951)
Max Weber (1864–1920)
Xenophon
Polybius
John Van Antwerp Fine Jr. (born 1939) - American medievalist specialized in the history of Central and Southeastern Europe, and Balkans
Ram Sharan Sharma (1919–2011) – early medieval History of India
Hakim Syed Zillur Rahman (born 1940) – historian of medieval medicine
Placido Puccinelli (1609–1685, Italian) – Northern Italy in the 10th century and the Florentine church
Marc Bloch (1886–1944, French) – Medieval France
John Boswell (1947–1994, American) – Homosexuality in the Middle Ages
Norman Cantor (1930–2004)
Georges Duby (1924–1996, French) – Specialized in the history of France between the Capets and the Valois
François-Louis Ganshof (1895–1980), Belgian – wrote on early medieval institutional history and feudalism
Geoffrey of Monmouth
Giraldus Cambrensis
Johan Huizinga (1872–1945, Dutch) – cultural history, wrote Waning of the Middle Ages
Jacques Le Goff (1924–2014, French) – Middle Ages, particularly the 12th and 13th centuries
Rev. F. X. Martin (1922–2000, Irish) – Mediævalist and campaigner
Rosamond McKitterick (born 1949) – Frankish and Carolingian history
Henri Pirenne (1862–1935) – the "Pirenne Thesis" of early Medieval development
Eileen Power (1889–1940) – Middle Ages
Miri Rubin (born 1956) – social and religious history, 1100–1500
Steven Runciman (1903–2000) – the Crusades
Richard Southern (1912–2001)
Sidney Painter (1902–1960)
John Julius Norwich (1929–2018)
John V. Tolan (born 1959)
Chris Wickham (born 1950)
Retha Warnicke (born 1939)
Aaron Gurevich (1924–2006)
Jerome Lee Shneidman (1929–2008) – psychohistory[ 1]
Michael Prestwich (born 1943)
Alessandro Barbero (born 1959)
Dick Harrison (born 1966)
Satish Chandra (1922–2017)
Irfan Habib (born 1931)
Michel Kaplan (born 1946, French) – Byzantinist
Gina Fasoli (1905–1992) – medieval cities, feudal society, and Lombardy
By nation or geographical area [ edit ]
See also List of Canadian historians .
Henry Adams (1838–1918) – history of the United States in the presidential administrations of Thomas Jefferson and James Madison
Stephen Ambrose (1936–2002) – biographer of Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard M. Nixon
Edward L. Ayers (born 1953) – U.S. South, founder of the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities (IATH) and Digital Scholarship Lab
George Bancroft (1800–1891) – wrote first large-scale history of the US
Charles A. Beard (1874–1948) – revisionist history of Founding Fathers suggesting monetary motivations
Samuel Flagg Bemis (1891–1973) – U.S. foreign policy; won two Pulitzer Prizes
Ira Berlin (1941–2018) - Slavery
William Brandon (1914–2002) – historian of the American West and Native Americans .
Holly Brewer (born 1964) – early American History
Alan Brinkley (1949–2019) – historian of the Great Depression
David H. Burton - U.S. historian and biographer of presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft as well as Clara Barton and Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.
Bruce Catton (1899–1978) – American Civil War
William Cronon (born 1954) – American environmental history , the frontier in New England , and the American West
J. Frank Dobie (1888–1964) – historian of Texas and the Southwestern United States
David Herbert Donald (1920–2009)
W. E. B. Du Bois (1868–1963) – historian of the Reconstruction
Drew Gilpin Faust (born 1947) – Civil War, culture of death, and the Confederacy
Robert H. Ferrell (1921–2018) – Harry S. Truman , the 20th-century U.S. presidency, World War I
Eric Foner (born 1943) – Civil War and Reconstruction
John Hope Franklin (1915–2009) – historian of African Americans
John A. Garraty (1920–2007) – biography
Elizabeth Fox-Genovese (1941–2007) – Southern slavery, women's history
Doris Kearns Goodwin (born 1943) - U.S. presidents, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1995 for No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II
Richard Hofstadter (1916–1970) – Progressivism and U.S. political history
Daniel Walker Howe - political and intellectual history of the early republic and antebellum period
Peter Iverson – 20th century U.S. West/Native American history (emphasis in Navajo history)
Paul Johnson (born 1928) – author of A History of the American People and a biographer of George Washington
Winthrop Jordan (1931–2007) – African-American history
Willard L. King (1893–1981) – biography and law
David Lavender (1910–2003) – Western United States
David McCullough (1933–2022) – general study, most notable work is recent biography of John Adams
James M. McPherson (born 1936) – American Civil War
Pauline Maier (1938–2013) – late Colonial, Revolution, Constitution
D. W. Meinig (1924–2020) – geographic history of America
Philip D. Morgan (born 1949) – slavery
David Nasaw (born 1945) – biography and U.S. cultural history
Francis Parkman (1823–1893) – historian of the French and Indian War
William B. Pickett (born 1940)
David Pietrusza (born 1949) - 20th century presidential elections; biography
Dominic Sandbrook (born 1974) – political history of the 1960s and 1970s
Arthur Schlesinger Sr. (1888–1965)
Arthur Schlesinger Jr. (1917–2007)
Cornelius Cole Smith, Jr. (1913–2004) – historian of Arizona , California and the Southwestern United States
Jean Edward Smith (1932–2019) – biography, foreign policy, political economy, constitutional law, legal history, and politics
Irma Tam Soong (1912–2001) – history of Chinese immigration in Hawaii
Frederick Jackson Turner (1861–1932) – developed the Frontier Thesis
Frank Vandiver (1925–2005)
Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) - pre-Colonial America to the early 20th century
Alexander Scott Withers (1792–1865) – primary accounts of colonial western Virginia conflicts
Sean Wilentz (born 1951) - political, social, and cultural history
Betty Wood (1945–2021) – early American history
Gordon S. Wood (born 1933) - American Revolution
C. Vann Woodward (1908–1999) – Southern United States
Howard Zinn (1922–2010) – political scientist and historian of the United States, known for A People's History of the United States
See also Category:Historians of Latin America
Donald Adamson (born 1939) – British
Robert C. Allen (born 1947) – British economic
Perry Anderson (born 1938) – British; European history
Leonie Archer (born 1955) – British
Karen Armstrong (born 1944) – religious
Gerald Aylmer (1926–2000) – British; administrative history
Bernard Bailyn (1922–2020) – Atlantic migration
Onyeka – Black Britons
The Venerable Bede (672–735) – Britain from 55 BC to 731 AD
Brian Bond (born 1936) – military
Asa Briggs (1921–2016) – British social.[ 2]
Herbert Butterfield (1900–1979) – historiography
Angus Calder (1942–2008) – Second World War
David Cannadine (born 1950) – Modern Britain, British business and philanthropy
J.C.D. Clark (born 1951) – 18th century
Linda Colley (born 1949) – 18th century
Patrick Collinson (1929–2011) – Elizabethan England & Puritanism
Maurice Cowling (1926–2005) – 19th and 20th century politics
John Darwin (born 1948) – British Empire
John Davies (1938–2015) - Wales
Susan Doran – Elizabethan
Jennifer Kewley Draskau – Manx history, Tudor history
Eamon Duffy (born 1947) – religious history of the 15th–17th centuries
Harold James Dyos (1921–1978) – urban
Geoffrey Rudolph Elton (1921–1994) – Tudor period
Charles Harding Firth (1857–1936) – political history of the 17th century
Antonia Fraser (born 1932) – 17th century
William Gibson (born 1959) – ecclesiastical history
Samuel Rawson Gardiner (1829–1902) – political history of the 17th century
Ruth Goodman (born 1963) – early modern
Andrew Gordon (born 1951) – naval
Geoffrey of Monmouth (died c. 1154) – England
Élie Halévy (1870–1937) - British 19th century
Mary Dormer Harris (1867–1936) - medievalist, local history of Coventry
Edward Hasted (1732–1812) – Kent
Max Hastings (born 1945) – military, Second World War
J. H. Hexter (1910–1996) – England in the 17th century
Christopher Hill (1912–2003) – England in the 17th century
Gertrude Himmelfarb (1922–2019) – social and cultural history of the Victorian period
Eric Hobsbawn (1917–2012) – Marxist British history
David Hume (1711–1776) – Scottish Enlightenment philosopher and author of the six volume History of England (originally History of Britain )
Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon (1609–1674) – English Civil Wars
John Edward Lloyd (1861–1947) – early Welsh history
Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay (1800–1859) – English writer and historian whose most famous work was The History of England from the Accession of James the Second
John Morrill (born 1946) Seventeenth-century political and military history
Lewis Bernstein Namier (1888–1960) – political history of the 18th century
Kenneth Morgan (born 1934) – modern Wales
Steven Pincus – 17th and 18th century England
Andrew Roberts (born 1963) – Political biographies, 19th and 20th centuries
A. L. Rowse (1903–1997) – Cornish history and Elizabethan England
Dominic Sandbrook (born 1974) – Britain in the 1960s and after
John Robert Seeley (1834–1895) – British political history of the modern period
Jack Simmons (1915–2000) – railways, topography
Paul Slack (born 1943) – Early Modern British Social history
David Spring (1918–2004) - British 19th century
David Starkey (born 1945) – Tudor historian and TV presenter
Lawrence Stone (1919–1999) – English society and the history of the family
Keith Thomas (born 1933) – Early Modern English Society
E. P. Thompson (1924–1993) – British working class
George Macaulay Trevelyan (1876–1962) – English history (many different periods)
Hugh Trevor-Roper, Baron Dacre of Glanton (1914–2003) – Britain in the 17th century
Retha Warnicke (born 1939) – Tudor history and gender issues
Andy Wood (born 1967) – British social historian, 1500 to present
Daniel Woolf (born 1958) – Early Modern England and History of Historical Writing
Cicely Veronica Wedgwood (1910–1997) – British
G. M. Young (1882–1959) - Victorian England
Perez Zagorin (1920–2009) – 16th and 17th centuries
History of the British Empire [ edit ]
See also List of historians of the French Revolution .
Lorenzo Arnone Sipari (born 1973) – social and environmental Italian history
R.J.B. Bosworth (born 1943) – Fascism, Mussolini
Benedetto Croce (1866–1952) – philosophy of history, modern Italian history
Vincent Cronin (1924–2011) – Renaissance art and Sicily
Renzo De Felice (1929–1996) – Fascism, biographer of Mussolini
John Foot (born 1964) – modern Italy history, The City
Emilio Gentile (born 1946) – Fascism
Carlo Ginzburg (born 1939) – witchcraft and agrarian cults, microhistory
Alessandra Kersevan (born 1950) – Italian concentration camps
Claudio Pavone (1920–2016) – Italian fascism, World War II, anti-fascism
Effie Pedaliu – Italian war crimes
John Pollard (born 1944) – The church and Fascism
Paul Ginsborg (born 1945) – The Risorgimento, Italian modern and contemporary history
Lucy Riall (born 1962) – The Risorgimento, Garibaldi, Sicily
Gaetano Salvemini (1873–1957) – Fascism, French Revolution
Denis Mack Smith (1920–2017) – Italian modern history
Arrigo Petacco (1929–2018) – Fascism
History of Moldova/Bessarabia[ edit ]
James Fall , 1682
William Robertson (1721–1793), 1763–1793
John Gillies (1747–1836), 1793–1836
George Brodie (1786–1967), 1836–1867
John Hill Burton (1809–1881), 1867–1881
William Forbes Skene (1809–1892), 1881–1893
David Masson (1822–1907), 1893–1908
Peter Hume Brown (1849–1918), 1908–1919
Robert Rait (1874–1936), 1919–1930
Robert Kerr Hannay (1867–1940), FRSE , 1930–1940
J. D. Mackie (1887–1978), OBE , 1958–1978
Gordon Donaldson (1913–1993), CBE , 1979–1993
Christopher Smout (born 1933), CBE , since 1993
Halil İnalcık (1916–2016), İstanbul, Türkiye), history of the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey
İlber Ortaylı (born 1947, Bregen, Österreich), history of the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey
Heath W. Lowry (born 1942, America), history of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey
Mehmet Fuat Köprülü (1890–1966, İstanbul, Türkiye), Turcologist and historian, history of the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey
Yusuf Halaçoğlu (born 1949, Adana, Türkiye), history of the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey
Reşat Ekrem Koçu (1905–1975, İstanbul, Türkiye), writer and historian, history of the Ottoman Empire
Ahmed Cevad Pasha (Kabaağaçlızade Ahmet Cevat Paşa) (1851–1900, İstanbul, Türkiye), Ottoman statesman (Grand Vizier), history of the Ottoman Empire
Aşıkpaşazade (Âşıkpasazâde Derviş Ahmet Âşıkî) (yak. 1400, Amasya–yak. 1484), Ottoman Empire/ Türkiye) history of the Ottoman Empire
Ibn Kemal (Kemal Paşazade (ibn-i Kemâl)) (1468–1534, The Ottoman Empire/Türkiye), Ottoman statesman, history of the Ottoman Empire
Koçi Bey (Mustafa Koçi Bey) (?–1650, The Ottoman Empire/Türkiye), Ottoman statesman, history of the Ottoman Empire
Katip Çelebi (Haci Halife Kalfa) (1609–1657, İstanbul, The Ottoman Empire/Türkiye), history of the Ottoman Empire
History of the Indian Subcontinent [ edit ]
History of Pakistan [ edit ]
By historical viewpoint [ edit ]
Niall Ferguson (born 1964) – Virtual History: Alternatives and Counterfactuals (1997)
Paul Avrich (1931–2006) – USA, oral history of the U.S. and Russia
Murray Bookchin (1921–2006) – USA, writer; founder of "social ecology "
Sam Dolgoff (1902–1990) – USA, writer, activist, co-founder of Anarcho-Syndicalist Review
Sébastien Faure (1858–1942) – France, Encyclopedie Anarchiste , 4 volumes (1932–1934)
David Goodway (born 1942) – UK, writer, editor
Daniel Guérin (1904–1988) – France, writer, editor Libertarian Communist
Robert Graham (born 1958) – USA, writer, editor
Andrej Grubacic – Bulgarian history and anarchism, lecturer at University of San Francisco
Peter Marshall (born 1946) – England, historian, philosopher, writer (of Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism , 1992)
Chuck W. Morse (born 1969) – USA, writer, founder of Institute for Anarchist Studies (IAS)
Max Nettlau (1865–1944) – Austria, writer of Geschichte der Anarchie , seven volumes
Abel Paz (1921–2009) – Spain, Civil war, Durruti, CNT/FAI
José Peirats (1908–1989) – Spain, historian of the CNT/FAI
Alexandre Skirda (1942–2020)
Antonio Tellez (1921–2005)
Dana Ward – founder of "Anarchist Archives", Online Research on the History and Theory of Anarchism, (USA)
George Woodcock (1912–1995)
Howard Zinn (1922–2010)
By general category [ edit ]
Environmental history [ edit ]
History of ideas, culture, literature, and philosophy[ edit ]
History of international relations [ edit ]
Michael Adas (born 1943) – colonialism and imperialism, global history
Jim Bennett (1947–2023) – mathematics, scientific instruments and astronomy
Stephen G. Brush (born 1935)
Vincent Cronin (1924–2011)
Allen G. Debus (1926–2009) – chemistry and medicine
A. Hunter Dupree (1921–2019) – botany; U.S. government policy on science and technology
Peter Galison (born 1955) – physics, philosophy, objectivity
John L. Heilbron (1934–2023) – physics, quantification, astronomy, religion and science
Richard L. Hills (1936–2019) – technology, steam power
Thomas P. Hughes (1923–2014) – technology
Evelyn Fox Keller (1936–2023) – science and gender, biology
Melvin Kranzberg (1917–1995) – technology
Daniel J. Kevles (born 1939) – science and politics, physics, biology, eugenics
Thomas Kuhn (1922–1996) – physics, "paradigm shifts "
James Mosley (born 1935) – printing
David F. Noble (1945–2010) – science and technology-based industrial development
Abraham Pais (1918–2000) – physics
Giuliano Pancaldi (born 1946) – Italian science
Theodore M. Porter (born 1953)
A. I. Sabra (1924–2013) – optics, Islamic science
George Sarton (1884–1956)
Jack Simmons (1915–2000) – railway history
Nathan Sivin (born 1931) – history of science in China
Kim H. Veltman (1948–2020) – science and art
M. Norton Wise (born 1940)
History of newspapers and magazines ,
History of radio , History of television , and
History of the Internet
Peter Ackroyd (born 1949) – Dickens, Blake, Thomas More, Eliot, Newton
James Boswell (1740–1795) – Samuel Johnson
Alan Bullock (1914–2004) – historian best known for his influential biography of Hitler
Robert Caro (born 1935) – Lyndon Johnson
Thomas Carlyle (1795–1881) – Friedrich der Grosse (the Great)
Vincent Cronin (1924–2011) – Louis XIV, Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, Catherine the Great, and Napoleon
Leon Edel (1907–1997) – Henry James
Richard Ellmann (1918–1987) – James Joyce
Erik Erikson (1902–1994) – psychoanalytic biographies of Luther and Gandhi
Roy Foster (born 1949) – W.B. Yeats
Joseph Frank (1918–2013) – Fyodor Dostoevsky
Elizabeth Gaskell (1810–1865) – Charlotte Brontë
Stephen Greenblatt (born 1943) – Shakespeare
Ragnhild Hatton (1913–1995) – King Charles XII of Sweden and King George I of Great Britain
Walter Isaacson (born 1952) – geniuses
Ian Kershaw (born 1943) – historian well known for his influential study of Hitler
Ralph G. Martin (1920–2013) – Hubert H. Humphrey , Harry S. Truman , Edward VIII , Golda Meir , and John F. Kennedy
Roi Medvedev (born 1925) – Stalin
Susan Quinn (born 1940) – Marie Curie
Ron Rosenbaum (born 1946) – author of Explaining Hitler
Norman Sherry (1925–2016) – Graham Greene
Jean Edward Smith (1932–2019) – Franklin D. Roosevelt , Ulysses S. Grant , John Marshall , and Lucius D. Clay
Suetonius – lives of the Caesars
Lytton Strachey (1880–1932) – Eminent Victorians
A.N. Wilson (born 1950) – Tolstoy
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By country or region
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Organizations, publications