Peter Holt (historian)
Peter Malcolm Holt | |
---|---|
Born | Astley Village, Lancashire, England | 28 November 1918
Died | |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University College, Oxford |
Academic work | |
Discipline | History of Sudan, History of the Middle East |
Peter Malcolm Holt, FBA (28 November 1918 – 2 November 2006) was a historian of the Middle East and Sudan.[1][2] He was generally known as P. M. Holt.
Biography[edit]
The son of a Unitarian minister, Holt attended Lord Williams's School in Thame, Oxfordshire, and studied history at University College, Oxford. He then obtained a diploma of education and worked as a secondary school teacher in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan 1941–53 (initially at Gordon Memorial College, the country's leading school), and then as Government Archivist and part-time lecturer at the University College of Khartoum 1952–55. During these years he became proficient in Arabic.[1]
Holt completed a DPhil at Oxford on “The personal rule of the Khalifa Abdallahi al-Ta'aishi”, on the second ruler of the Sudanese Mahdist State (1885-1899), initially under the supervision of H.A.R. Gibb.[3] He taught at SOAS, the University of London as Lecturer from 1955 to 1982, then Reader, then Professor of Arab History, and finally Professor of the Near and Middle East from 1975 to 1982.[2]
Research[edit]
Holt was the per-eminent historian of the Sudan. His first book, The Mahdist State in the Sudan 1881–1898. A Study of its Origins, Development, and Overthrow (1958) was based on his DPhil thesis, and was followed by A modern history of the Sudan, from the Funj Sultanate to the present day (1965, later republished as The history of the Sudan from the coming of Islam to the present day). He then expanded his interests geographically, publishing Egypt and the Fertile Crescent 1516-1922, A Political History in 1966). He then added a second field, becoming an authority on the Mamluk Sultanate, (1250-1517), publishing The memoirs of a Syrian prince: Abu'l-Fidā, Sultan of Ḥamāh (672-732) (1983) and Early Mamluk diplomacy (1260 - 1290): Treaties of Baybars and Qalāwūn with Christian rulers (1995).[1] A general history of the Near East, The Age of the Crusades, The Near East from the Eleventh Century to 1517 was published in 1986.
Holt was also one of the founding editors of The Cambridge History of Islam, along with Ann K. S. Lambton and Bernard Lewis.
His work on Sudan was carried forward by one of his PhD students, Seán O'Fahey.
Works[edit]
- Holt, P.M., The Mahdist State in the Sudan 1881–1898. A Study of its Origins, Development, and Overthrow (Oxford, 1958).
- Holt, P.M., A modern history of the Sudan, from the Funj Sultanate to the present day (London, 1965).
- Holt, P. M., Egypt and the Fertile Crescent 1516-1922, A Political History (London, 1966).
- Holt, P. M., Studies in the History of the Near East (London, 1973).
- Holt, P. M., Cambridge History of Islam (Cambridge, 1978).
- Holt, P. M., The memoirs of a Syrian prince : Abu'l-Fidā, Sultan of Ḥamāh (672-732) (Wiesbaden, 1983)
- Holt, P. M., The Age of the Crusades, The Near East from the Eleventh Century to 1517 (London, 1986).
- Holt, P. M., Early Mamluk diplomacy (1260 - 1290): Treaties of Baybars and Qalāwūn with Christian rulers (Leiden 1995).
- Holt, P. M., The Crusader States and Their Neighbours, 1098-1291 (Pearson 2004). ISBN 0-582-36931-2
References[edit]
- HOLT, Prof. Peter Malcolm, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014
- ^ a b c "Obituary: Professor P. M. Holt". The Independent. 28 November 2006. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022.
- ^ a b "Peter Malcolm Holt 1918–2006" (PDF). Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 5 May 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), British Academy, 2008 - ^ Holt, PM (1951). The Mahdist state in the Sudan. Clarendon Press.