André Raymond
André Raymond (7 August 1925 – 18 February 2011) was professor emeritus at the University of Provence. He was an expert on the history of the city in the Arab world.
Honours and awards
[edit]Honours
[edit]- 1983 : Knight of the Legion of Honour (France)
- 1981 : Officier of the Ordre des Palmes académiques (France)
- 1979 : Commander of the National Order of Merit of Tunisia
- 1975 : Officier of the Order of Civil Merit of the Syrian Arab Republic (Syria)
- 1969 : Officier of the Order of Merit (Egypt)
Awards
[edit]- 2003 : IRCICA award.
- 2002 : Lewis Galantiere prize.
- 1998 : Medal of Honor of Tunis University.
- 1980 : CNRS Silver Medal.
- 1978 : Prix Bordin of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres.
Career
[edit]Raymond was director of the French Institute for Arab Studies in Damascus, and of the Institute for Research and Study on the Arab and Islamic World, in Aix-en-Provence. At the time of his death he was professor emeritus at the University of Provence.[1]
Raymond was an expert on the city in the Arab world about which he wrote several books. In 2002 his essays and articles on the subject were collected for a volume in the Variorum Collected Studies series titled Arab cities in the Ottoman period: Cairo, Syria and the Maghreb.[2]
Death
[edit]Raymond died on 18 February 2011.[3]
Selected publications
[edit]- The great Arab cities in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries: An introduction. New York University Press, 1984. (Hagop Kevorkian Series on Near Eastern Art and Civilization) ISBN 0814773915
- Le Caire. 1993.
- Cairo: City of history. Cairo: American University in Cairo Press. (Translator Willard Wood) ISBN 9774246608
- Raymond, A. (2000). Cairo. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674003160.
- Arab cities in the Ottoman period: Cairo, Syria and the Maghreb. Ashgate Variorum, 2002. (Variorum Collected Studies series) ISBN 978-0-86078-874-4
References
[edit]- ^ Cairo. Harvard University Press. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
- ^ Arab Cities in the Ottoman Period. Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine Ashgate. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
- ^ "André Raymond".