David S. Katz
Encyclopedia
David S. Katz FRHistS is professor of early modern European history at Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University is a public university located in Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel. With nearly 30,000 students, TAU is Israel's largest university.-History:...

 in Israel, where he has taught since 1978. He holds the Abraham Horodisch Chair for the History of Books (1994) and is director of the Lessing Institute for European History and Civilization. Katz received his D.Phil. from Oxford University (1978) where he was a pupil of Hugh Trevor-Roper (Lord Dacre). He was elected a fellow of the Royal Historical Society
Royal Historical Society
The Royal Historical Society was founded in 1868. The premier society in the United Kingdom which promotes and defends the scholarly study of the past, it is based at University College London...

of England in 1993.

Selected Bibliography

Philo-Semitism and the Readmission of the Jews to England, 1603-1655, Oxford
University Press (Oxford), 1982.

Sabbath and Sectarianism in Seventeenth-Century England, E.J. Brill (Leiden), 1988.

(Editor, with Jonathan I. Israel) Sceptics, Millenarians, and Jews, E.J. Brill
(Leiden), 1990.

(Editor, with Yosef Kaplan) Gerush ve-shivah: Yehude Angliyah be-Hilufe ha-
Zemanim
(title means "Exile and Return: Anglo-Jewry through the Ages"), Israel
Historical Society (Jerusalem), 1993.

The Jews in the History of England, 1485-1850, Oxford University Press (Oxford), 1994.

(with Richard H. Popkin) Messianic Revolution: Radical Religious
Politics to the End of the Second Millennium
, Hill & Wang (New York), 1998.

(Editor, with James E. Force) Everything Connects: Essays in Honor of Richard H.
Popkin
, E.J. Brill (Leiden), 1998.

God's Last Words: Reading the English Bible from the Reformation to
Fundamentalism
, Yale University Press (New Haven), 2004.

The Occult Tradition: From the Renaissance to the Present Day, Jonathan Cape/Random House
(London), 2005.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK