Hajo Holborn

Hajo Holborn (18 May 1902, Berlin 20 June 1969, Bonn) was a German-American historian and specialist in modern German history.

Early life

Hajo Holborn was born the son of Ludwig Holborn, the German physicist and "Direktor der Physikalisch-Technischen Reichsanstalt," and became a student of Friedrich Meinecke at Berlin University, where he achieved a doctor of philosophy in 1924. After establishing at Heidelberg in 1926 as lecturer in medieval and modern history, he became Privatdozent there until he was called back to Berlin as Carnegie Professor of History and International Relationships at the private Deutsche Hochschule für Politik.[1] He was dismissed from his appointments in 1933 by the Nazi government, but he had already left the country.[1]

Emigration

To avoid the Nazi terror, that same year he fled to the United Kingdom, then emigrated to the United States in 1934. Shortly after coming to America, he was appointed visiting professor of German history at Yale.[1] He taught Diplomatic History at Tufts University, Massachusetts, (1936–1942) and was a guest professor at the University of Vienna, Austria (1955). He became a U.S. citizen and during the Second World War he worked for the Office of Strategic Services as special assistant to the chief of its Research and Analysis Branch, William L. Langer.

Postwar

After the war, he served as Randolph W. Townsend Professor at Yale until 1959, when he was awarded the title of Sterling Professor of History at Yale University; here he continued to teach and write until his death in 1969.[1]

In 1967, Holborn became the first president of the American Historical Association not born in the United States.[2] Several specialists of German and European history in America, including Peter Gay, were students of Holborn.

Family

Like their father, Hajo Holborn's children pursued successful careers in academic scholarship. His son Fred Holborn was a senior adjunct professor of American Foreign Policy at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University before his death in 2005. Holborn's daughter, Hanna Holborn Gray (born 1930), is a historian of political thought in the Renaissance and Reformation. She is the Harry Pratt Judson Professor Emeritus at the University of Chicago and was the University's President for 15 years.

Work

Prior to his emigration, Holborn was commissioned by the government to compose a history of the constitution of the Weimar Republic, resulting in the work "The Weimar Republic and the Birth of the German Democratic Party: The Hajo Holborn Papers, 1849-1956." Other works by Holborn include the History of Modern Germany series, spanning three volumes and covering a four-century period from the Reformation and culminating in the capitulation of Hitler's regime in 1945.

Holborn's work has been praised by several of his distinguished peers (e.g. Fritz Stern).

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Pflanze, Otto P. (2002). "The Americanization of Hajo Halborn". In Lehmann, Hartmut; Sheehan, James J. An Interrupted Past: German-speaking Refugee Historians in the United States after 1933. Cambridge University Press. pp. 170–179. ISBN 9780521558334.
  2. Wegener, Jens (2012). ""An Organisation, European in Character"—European Agency and American Control at the Centre Européen, 1925–1940". In Kriege, John; Rausch, Helke. American Foundations and the Coproduction of World Order in the Twentieth Century. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. p. 60.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.