David Armitage

David Armitage

Lloyd C. Blankfein Professor of History
David  Armitage
  • Region(s): Britain; Atlantic World
  • Time Period(s): 17th century; 18th century
  • Theme(s): imperial history; international history; intellectual history; political history

David Armitage, MA, PhD, LittD, CorrFRSE, FRHistS, FAHA, is the Lloyd C. Blankfein Professor of History and former Chair of the Department of History at Harvard University, where he teaches intellectual history and international history. He is also an Affiliated Professor in the Harvard Department of Government, an Affiliated Faculty Member at Harvard Law School, an Honorary Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge, an Honorary Professor of History at the University of Sydney and an Honorary Professor of History at Queen's University Belfast. During the academic year 2019-20, he will also serve as the Sons of the American Revolution Visiting Professor at King's College London.

He was born in Britain and educated at the University of Cambridge and Princeton University; before moving to Harvard in 2004, he taught for eleven years at Columbia University. A prize-winning teacher and writer, he has lectured on six continents and has held research fellowships and visiting positions in Australia, Britain, China, France, Germany, South Korea and the United States.

David Armitage is the author or editor of seventeen books, most recently Civil Wars: A History in Ideas (2017). Among his earlier works are The Ideological Origins of the British Empire (2000), which won the Longman/History Today Book of the Year Award, The Declaration of Independence: A Global History (2007), which was chosen as a Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year, Foundations of Modern International Thought (2013) and The History Manifesto (co-auth., 2014), a New Statesman Book of the Year and one of the Chronicle of Higher Education's most influential books of the past 20 years. His most recent edited books are Oceanic Histories (co-ed., 2018), The Law of Nations in Global History (co-ed., 2017), Pacific Histories: Ocean, Land, People (co-ed., 2014) and The Age of Revolutions in Global Context, c. 1760-1840 (co-ed., 2010). His next book will be a global history of treaties over the longue durée and he is also completing an edition of John Locke’s colonial writings and co-editing a collection on the cultural history of peace in the Enlightenment. His articles and essays have appeared in journals, newspapers and collections around the world and his works have been translated into fifteen languages.

He co-edits two book series with Cambridge University Press, Ideas in Context and Cambridge Oceanic Histories, and he is a Syndic of the Harvard University Press and a member of the Steering Committee of the Center for the History of British Political Thought at the Folger Shakespeare Library. In 2006, the National Maritime Museum in London awarded him its Caird Medal for “conspicuously important work ... of a nature that involves communicating with the public” and in 2008 Harvard named him a Walter Channing Cabot Fellow for “achievements and scholarly eminence in the fields of literature, history or art”. In 2015, he received Cambridge University's highest degree, the LittD, for “distinction by some original contribution to the advancement of science or of learning”. He is a Corresponding Member of the Real Academia de la Historia, Madrid, a Corresponding Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, an Honorary Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and a Foreign Member of the Academia Europaea.

He will next be on sabbatical in 2022-23.

 

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