Robert Lee Wolff

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Robert Lee Wolff (26 December 1915, New York City – 11 November 1980, Cambridge, Massachusetts) was a Harvard history professor, known for his 1956 book The Balkans in our time[1] and his library collection of English novels of the Victorian period with over 18,000 items.[2]

Wolff received his bachelor's degree (1936) and his master's degree from

Guggenheim fellow. He died of a heart attack in 1980 at the age of 64, while still an active member of the Harvard history department.[5]

Wolff wrote articles, prefaces, and books on history and English literature and was the co-author of three widely used textbooks in high school and undergraduate history courses. His library of English novels of the Victorian period was acquired in the 1980s by the University of Texas at Austin for $2.6 million.

Works

References

  1. ^ a b Roberts, Henry L. (July 1956). "Capsule review: The Balkans in our time by Robert Lee Wolff". Foreign Affairs. Council on Foreign Affairs. "This addition to the American Foreign Policy Library Series is easily the best single survey of the recent history of Jugoslavia, Rumania, Bulgaria and Albania. About a third of the volume is devoted to a review of the Balkans before 1939; the remainder leads us into the tortured war years and the bleak era of Communist domination. The author is Professor of History at Harvard."
  2. ^ The Robert Lee Wolff Collection of 19th-Century Fiction
  3. ^ "Robert Lee Wolff". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  4. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  5. ^ "History Professor Robert Wolff Dies Following Heart Attack". The Harvard Crimson. November 13, 1980. (The online title has the misspelling "Woolf".)
  6. ^ In 1946 John B. Christopher, who specialized in French and Middle Eastern history, became a professor of history at the University of Rochester. His publications include Middle East: national growing pains (1961); Lebanon: yesterday and today (1966); Islamic tradition (1972).
  7. JSTOR 2932484
    .
  8. .
  9. .