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W. X. Y. Z. Edward Baring. Associate Professor of History and Human Values. 609-258-8749. ebaring@princeton.edu. 214 Dickinson Hall.
- Federico Marcon
Federico Marcon is a social historian of ideas. Although his...
- Isadora Moura Mota
Before joining the Princeton faculty in 2019, she was an...
- Vera S. Candiani
Faculty Bookshelf; About the Program in History of Science...
- Beth Lew-Williams
At Princeton, Lew-Williams is affiliated faculty in the...
- Jack Tannous
Faculty Bookshelf; About the Program in History of Science...
- Anthony Grafton
Current ProjectProfessor Grafton’s current project is a...
- Kevin M. Kruse
Kevin M. Kruse studies the political, social, and...
- Yaacob Dweck
Yaacob Dweck studies the Jews of the early modern period....
- Federico Marcon
Founded in 1603 by Federico Cesi, the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei is the world’s oldest scientific academy and counts Galileo Galilei among its first members. David Bell Named a Distinguished Fellow of the Faculty of Humanities at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In 1989 a twenty-seven-year-old Stephen Kotkin joined the faculty of the Princeton history department. Over the next thirty-three years, until his transition to emeritus status on September 1, 2022, Kotkin would write half-a-dozen books, train a cadre of graduate students, and teach hundreds of undergraduates.
Princeton faculty are renowned leaders in their fields, extraordinary teachers and dedicated mentors.
The faculty encourage students to take as comprehensive a view of history as possible with the goal of cultivating a far-reaching understanding of the past. Throughout their enrollment, students develop the necessary skills to conduct discipline-defining research.
Laurence S. Rockefeller Professor of Sociology and International Affairs and the University Center for Human Values
Peter Brown ranks among the giants in humanistic scholarship. He is known best and will always be remembered as the creator of a field of study, late antiquity, which understands this era in its own terms, not merely as a transitional period between the classical world and the early middle ages.