Awards & Winners

Bernard Lewis

Date of Birth 31-May-1916
Place of Birth London
(England, United Kingdom, Great Britain)
Nationality United Kingdom, United States of America
Profession Professor, Author, Historian
Bernard Lewis, FBA is a British-American historian specializing in oriental studies who is also known as a public intellectual and political commentator. He is the Cleveland E. Dodge Professor Emeritus of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University. Lewis' expertise is in the history of Islam and the interaction between Islam and the West, and is especially famous in academic circles for his works on the history of the Ottoman Empire. Lewis served as a soldier in the British Army in the Royal Armoured Corps and Intelligence Corps during the Second World War before being seconded to the Foreign Office. After the war, he returned to the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London and was appointed to the new chair in Near and Middle Eastern History. Lewis is a widely read expert on the Middle East, and is regarded as one of the West’s leading scholars of that region. His advice has been frequently sought by policymakers, including the Bush administration. In the Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing, Martin Kramer, whose Ph.D. thesis was directed by Lewis, considered that, over a 60-year career, Lewis has emerged as "the most influential postwar historian of Islam and the Middle East."

Awards by Bernard Lewis

Check all the awards nominated and won by Bernard Lewis.

1999


National Jewish Book Award for Israel
Honored for : The Multiple Identities of the Middle East

1996


Nominations 1996 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
National Book Critics Circle Award for General Nonfiction The Middle East: A Brief History of the Last 2,000 Years