List of women historians by area of study
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of women historians categorized by their area of study.
- Leonie Archer (born 1955) – Graeco-Roman Palestine
- Mary Beard (born 1955)
- Halet Çambel (1916, Berlin, Germany - 2014, İstanbul, Türkiye) — Archaeologist, Historian, Ancient Anatolian
- Yuliya Kolosovskaya (1920–2002) – Roman history and Roman provinces of the Danube
- Barbara Levick (born 1931) – Roman emperors
- Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg (1944–2000) – specializing in classical Greek and Achaemenid history
- Mariya Sergeyenko (1891–1987) – Roman agriculture and daily life
- Elena Shtaerman (1914–1991) – Roman history
- Lily Ross Taylor (1886–1969) – Roman history
Medieval history
- Elisabeth van Houts (born 1952) – medieval European history
- Rosamond McKitterick (born 1949) – Frankish and Carolingian history
- Anneke B. Mulder-Bakker (born 1940) – specialist in the position of women during the Middle Ages
- Mayke de Jong (born 1950) – political and religious history of the early Middle Ages
- Eileen Power (1889–1940) – Middle Ages
- Miri Rubin (born 1956) – social and religious history, 1100–1500
- Catrien Santing (born 1958) – cultural history and medical history in the late-medieval and early-modern Low Countries
- Päivi Setälä (1943–2014) – women's history
- Retha Warnicke (born 1939)
By nation or geographical area
North America
History of Canada
- Charlotte Gray (born 1948) – popular histories
- Agnes Laut (1871 – 1936)
See also List of Canadian historians.
History of the Caribbean
- Aviva Chomsky (born 1957)
- Lucille M. Mair (1924–2009)
History of the United States
- Holly Brewer (born 1964) – early American History
- Alexis Coe (born 1988) – Presidential history
- Drew Gilpin Faust (born 1947) – Civil War, culture of death, and the Confederacy
- Elizabeth Fox-Genovese (1941–2007) – Southern slavery, women's history
- Doris Kearns Goodwin (born 1943) – U.S. presidents, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1995 for No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II
- Pauline Maier (1938–2013) – late Colonial, Revolution, Constitution
- Irma Tam Soong (1912–2001) – history of Chinese immigration in Hawaii
- Betty Wood (1945–2021) – early American history
Latin America
History of Latin America
See also Category:Historians of Latin America
- Aviva Chomsky (born 1957)
- Ann Farnsworth-Alvear
- Jane Gilmer Landers (born 1947)
Brazil
- Lilia Moritz Schwarcz (born 1957)
Peru
- María Rostworowski (1915–2016)
Europe
History of Europe
- Patricia Clavin (born 1964) – international relations and transnational relations
- Elizabeth Eisenstein (1923–2016) – early printing and transitions in media
- Julia P. Gelardi – royal history of 19th and 20th centuries
- Elisabeth van Houts (born 1952) – medieval European history
- Aira Kemiläinen (1919–2006) – European history of ideas
- Laura Kolbe (born 1957)
- Effie Pedaliu – history of Italian war crimes and Cold War
- Charlotte Zeepvat – royal history of 19th and 20th centuries
History of Belgium
- Sophie de Schaepdrijver (born 1961) – World War I
History of England and Britain
- Leonie Archer (born 1955) – British
- Antoinette Burton (born 1961) – British Empire
- Karen Armstrong (born 1944) – religious
- Linda Colley (born 1949) – 18th century
- Susan Doran – Elizabethan
- Jennifer Kewley Draskau (died 2024) – Manx history, Tudor history
- Antonia Fraser (born 1932) – 17th century
- Ruth Goodman (born 1963) – early modern
- Mary Dormer Harris (1867–1936) – medievalist, local history of Coventry
- Ragnhild Hatton (1913–1995) – biographer of King Charles XII of Sweden[1] and King George I of Great Britain[2]
- Lotte Hellinga (born 1932) – book historian, expert in early printing, expert in the work of the fifteenth-century printer William Caxton.
- Gertrude Himmelfarb (1922–2019) – social and cultural history of the Victorian period
- Suzannah Lipscomb (born 1978) – 16th century
- Retha Warnicke (born 1939) – Tudor history and gender issues
- Cicely Veronica Wedgwood (1910–1997) – British
- G. M. Young (1882–1959) – Victorian England
History of the British Empire
- Antoinette Burton (born 1961)
History of Croatia
- Nada Klaić (1920–1988)
- Mirjana Gross (1922–2012)
History of Finland
- Marjatta Hietala (born 1943) – urban history, history of innovations
- Riitta Nikula (born 1944) – generalist historian of Finnish architecture
- Jully Ramsay (1865–1919) – first woman genealogist in Finland, pioneer of Finnish genealogy
History of France
- Natalie Zemon Davis (born 1928) – early modern France
- Gisèle Sapiro (born 1965) – 19th and 20th century French literature
- Alma Söderhjelm (1870–1949) – editing the correspondence of the French Queen Marie Antoinette with the Swedish nobleman von Fersen and with some French revolutionaries
History of Germany
- Celia Applegate – music history and nationalism
- Gisela Bock (born 1942)
- Luise Gerbing (1855–1927), history of Thuringia
- Deborah Hertz (born 1949)
- Claudia Koonz (born 1940)
- Wendy Lower (born 1965) – history of National Socialism
History of Ireland
- Mary Bonaventure Browne (after 1610–after 1670) – Poor Clare and historian
- Ann Buckley
- Kathleen Hughes (1926–1977)
History of Italy
- Alessandra Kersevan (born 1950) – Italian concentration camps
- Effie Pedaliu – Italian war crimes
- Lucy Riall (born 1962) – The Risorgimento, Garibaldi, Sicily
History of Moldova/Bessarabia
History of the Netherlands
- Henrica van Erp (1480–1548) – monastery life
History of Romania
- Irina Livezeanu (born 1952)
History of Russia
- Patricia Kennedy Grimsted (born 1935) – post-Soviet archives
- Lindsey Hughes (1949–2007) – C17th and C18th
- Anne Applebaum (born 1964) – Gulag history
- Sheila Fitzpatrick (born 1941) – everyday life under Stalinism
History of Scotland
- Rosalind Mitchison (1919–2002)
- Jenny Wormald (1942–2015)
History of Slovakia
- Gabriela Dudeková (born 1968) – social policy of Austria-Hungary; situation of POWs and civilians in World War I; history of feminism and gender studies
- Zora Mintalová – Zubercová (born 1950) – food history and material culture of Central Europe
History of Slovenia
- Alessandra Kersevan (born 1950) – Italian concentration camps
- Marta Verginella (born 1960) – history of the Slovene minority in Italy (1920–1947)
History of Spain
- Ida Altman (born 1950) – Early modern Spain, colonial Latin America
- Julia Pavón (born 1968) – medieval history of Navarra
History of Sweden
- Ragnhild Hatton (1913–1995) – biographer of King Charles XII of Sweden[1] and King George I of Great Britain[2]
History of Yugoslavia
- Barbara Jelavich (1923–1995) – wrote extensively on Balkan history, along with her husband Charles Jelavich
- Catherine Samary – author of Yugoslavia Dismembered
- Stephen Schwartz (born 1948)
Europe and Asia
Asia
Middle East
- Caroline Finkel
- Hamilton Alexander Rosskeen Gibb (1895–1971) – Editor, The Encyclopaedia of Islam
- Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg (1944–2000) – Achaemenid history
Central Asia
- Lola Dodkhudoeva (born 1951), Tajikistani historian specialising in medieval Central Asian affairs
- Svetlana Gorshenina (born 1969), Uzbek specialist on Pre-Islamic Central Asia
South Asia
History of the Indian Subcontinent
- Ayesha Jalal (born 1956)
- Romila Thapar (born 1931)
- Barbara Metcalf (born 1941)
- Tanika Sarkar
- Isabel Giberne Sieveking (1857–1936) – Indian Mutiny
- Barbara Ramusack (born 1937)
Far East
History of Japan
- Gail Lee Bernstein (born 1939)
- Carol Gluck (born 1941)
- Susan Hanley (born 1939)
- Joyce Lebra (1925–2021)
- Amy Stanley (born 1978)
History of China
- Ann Paludan (1928–2014) – ancient China
History of Hong Kong
- Elizabeth Sinn Yuk Yee (born 1961)
Africa
- Jocelyne Dakhlia (born 1959) – political and cultural history of Islam in the Maghreb
History of the Serers
- Marguerite Dupire (1920–2015) – French scholar of Serer religion and history