Robert Leon Chazan (April 25, 1936 – February 12, 2024) was an American historian who was the S.H. and Helen R. Scheuer Professor of Hebrew and Judaic Studies at New York University.[1]
According to Andrew Gow writing in Speculum, Chazan is, "a distinguished scholar in the field of Jewish history and Christian-Jewish relations in the high Middle Ages."[4]
A festschrift published in Chazan's honor and edited by David Engel, Lawrence Schiffman, Elliot Wolfson, and Yechiel Schur, lists, "the history of the Jewish communities in Western Christendom during the Middle Ages, Jewish-Christian interactions in medieval Europe, medieval Jewish Biblical exegesis and religious literature, and historical representations of the experience of medieval Jewry," as 4 of the scholarly concerns that have been central to Chazan's work.[5]
Chazan died on February 12, 2024, at the age of 87.[6][3]
Bibliography
The Trial of the Talmud: Paris, 1240 (Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2012)
Reassessing Jewish Life in Medieval Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
^Gow, Arthur Colin (July 1999). "Reviewed Work: Medieval Stereotypes and Modern Antisemitism. by Robert Chazan". Speculum. 74 (3): 718–720. doi:10.2307/2886782. JSTOR2886782.
^Engel, David (2012). Studies in Medieval Jewish Intellectual and Social History. Brill. ISBN9789004222335.