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Abraham Schalit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Abraham Schalit
Born1898
Zolochiv, Austria-Hungary
Died21 August 1979(1979-08-21) (aged 80–81)
Alma materUniversity of Vienna
AwardsTchernichovsky Prize
Israel Prize (1960)

Abraham Haim Schalit (Hebrew: אברהם שליט) (1898, 21 August 1979[1]) was an Israeli historian and a scholar of the Second Temple period.

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Transcription

Biography

Schalit was born in 1898 in the Galician town of Zolochiv, then in Austria-Hungary (from 1918 to 1939 in Poland and now in Ukraine). He studied at the University of Vienna. In 1929, he immigrated to Mandate Palestine, now Israel. In 1950, he joined the faculty of History Department of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and was appointed a professor in 1959.

Major works

Abraham Schalit wrote his major works on Herod and Josephus. The discovery of his lost 1925 Vienna dissertation on Josephus shows a shift in his views. He originally saw Josephus as a bad historian but a patriot, sincerely seeking to further the rebels' cause against Rome. Later he regarded him as a pragmatist.[2]

Awards

See also

References

  1. ^ In memory of Abraham Schalit Archived 2020-08-14 at the Wayback Machine Includes a wealth of information including his picture, date of death and more. (PDF document in Hebrew, Yad Ben Zvi website)
  2. ^ Daniel R. Schwartz, More on Schalit's Changing Josephus: The Lost First Stage
  3. ^ "Israel Prize recipients in 1960 (in Hebrew)". Israel Prize official website. Archived from the original on 14 June 2012.
This page was last edited on 30 October 2023, at 19:52
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