Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Michael Ivanovitch Rostovtzeff was born in Kiev, Russia, on November 10, 1870. He taught ancient history at the University of Wisconsin, 1920-1925, and Yale University, 1925-1939, where he also served as director of archaeological research and curator of ancient art, 1939-1944. Rostovtzeff died in New Haven, Connecticut, on October 20, 1952.

  2. He graduated from the Kiev gymnasium in due course, anticipating. Michael Ivanovich Rostovtzeff, 1870-1952 I29. his future interests with a paper on "The Administration of the. Roman Provinces in the Time of Cicero," and entered the University of Kiev, only to transfer to St. Petersburg in I890, when his father.

  3. Michael Rostovtzeff. Michael Rostovtzeff, 1870-1952, russisk antikhistoriker, der udvandrede først til Storbritannien og siden til USA, hvor han 1925-44 var professor ved Yale University. Rostovtzeff var den førende blandt de antikhistorikere, der i begyndelsen af 1900-t. forsøgte at flytte fokus fra politisk til social og økonomisk ...

  4. Michael Rostovtzeff var russisk historiker, men emigrerede til Vesten i forbindelse med den russiske revolution 1917. Han arbejdede på Yale University i USA 1925-1944. ÅRSAGER TIL DEN ANTIKKE KULTURS FORFALD

  5. Mikhail Ivanovich Rostovtzeff, or Rostovtsev, was a Russian historian whose career straddled the 19th and 20th centuries and who produced important works on ancient Roman and Greek history. He was a member of the Russian Academy of Science, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society.

  6. 20 de nov. de 1992 · The Michael I. Rostovtzeff Papers span the years 1897 to 1968 with the bulk dated 1926 to 1954. The collection chiefly consists of the correspondence of Michael Rostovtzeff and C. Bradford Welles, a colleague of Rostovtzeff's at Yale University, with other scholars in the fields of ancient history, archaeology, and philology.

  7. 3 de mar. de 1991 · Rostovtzeff surpassed Westermann’s expectations. His diary entry of June 29th 1919 (39-40) is decisive and clearly a decisive document for the history of American classics, here published for the first time. Wes (40) finds “striking” that “Rostovtzeff was apparently full of confidence in the eventual fall of the Bolsheviks.”.