David Cohen (historian)

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Born(1882-12-31)31 December 1882
Deventer, Netherlands
Died3 September 1967(1967-09-03) (aged 84)
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Relatives
David Cohen
Cohen in 1924
Cohen in 1924
Born(1882-12-31)31 December 1882
Deventer, Netherlands
Died3 September 1967(1967-09-03) (aged 84)
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Alma materLeiden University
Relatives

David Cohen (31 December 1882, Deventer – 3 September 1967, Amsterdam) was a Dutch classicist and papyrologist and one of the two chairs of the Jewish Council of Amsterdam [nl; de; he] (Joodse Raad, or Judenrat, of Amsterdam) during the occupation of the Netherlands in World War II. He was Professor of Ancient History at the University of Amsterdam and a prominent Zionist leader.

Cohen was educated at Leiden University.[1] He was a teacher in The Hague and became a private lecturer at the University of Leiden.[2] In 1924 he became a professor by special appointment at the same university.[3][1] Two years later he was appointed full professor of Ancient History at the Municipal University of Amsterdam.[4] Cohen was one of the founders and editor of Hermeneus: Monthly Magazine for Ancient Culture, the first edition of which appeared in 1928.[5][2]

Second World War and after

In 1941 Cohen and Asscher were appointed by the German occupiers as chairs of the Jewish Council for Amsterdam.[5][6] In September 1943, Cohen and Abraham Asscher were themselves arrested and taken to the Westerbork transit camp.[7] Later they were deported from there, Cohen to the Theresienstadt concentration camp. There he survived the war.[3]

After the war, the presidency of the Jewish Council was severely criticized. In 1947, the Jewish Honor Council forbade him to fulfill a position within the Jewish community; this decision was canceled in 1950. Cohen did, however, regain his professorship after the war at the University of Amsterdam, where he retired in 1953.[6]

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