Norman Stone
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norman Stone (1941—) is a British historian of modern Europe, especially Central and Eastern Europe. Stone was born in Edinburgh, Scotland. Between 1984-1997, he served as professor of Modern History at the University of Oxford. Since 1997 Stone has worked in Turkey, first at Bilkent University, Ankara, then in 2005 transferring to Koc University, Istanbul, where he still continues to teach. He has been much criticized for his public assurances during 2004 (notably in The Spectator and The Times Literary Supplement) that the Armenian genocide never occurred.[1], [2]
[edit] Work
- The Eastern Front, 1914-1917 (1975), ISBN 0-340-12874-7
- Hitler (1980), ISBN 0-340-24980-3
- Europe Transformed, 1878-1919 (1983), ISBN 0-00-634262-0; 2nd ed. (1999), ISBN 0-631-21507-7
- Czechoslovakia: Crossroads and Crises, 1918-88 (1989), ISBN 0-333-48507-6
- The Times Atlas of World History (1989), ISBN 0-7230-0304-1 (ed.)
- The Other Russia (1990), ISBN 0-571-13574-9, with Michael Glenny