Sir Hamilton Gibb bolsters Islamic studies and advocates an interdisciplinary approach

Area studies to Islamic studies 1955

Sir Hamilton Gibb Bolsters Islamic Studies and Advocates an Interdisciplinary Approach

Sir Hamilton Gibb resigned from his position as Laudian Professor of Arabic at Oxford and became Jewett Professor of Arabic and University Professor at Harvard in 1955. During his time at Harvard, Professor Gibb drew many students and faculty to the university including George Makdisi, George Kirk, and Albert Julius Meyer. Professor Gibb sought to move beyond the rigid Orientalist approach of European scholarship and embrace a more interdisciplinary one to train each student to be an “academic amphibian” who could be at home in different academic environments while remaining grounded in classical training, with philology and history at its core. In February 1964, Professor Gibb tragically suffered a stroke, leaving a leadership void in CMES for many years. His publications include The Arab Conquests in Central Asia (1923), The Islamic Background of Ibn Khaldūn’s Political Theory (1933), Modern Trends in Islam (1945), Mohammedanism (1949), and The Life of Saladin: From the Works of Baha' Ad-Din and 'Imad Ad-Din (1973). Among his notable students is Roy Mottahedeh, Gurney Research Professor of History.

Sir Hamilton Gibb

Sir Hamilton Gibb (1895-1971)

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