Gilbert Trausch
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Gilbert Trausch (born 20 September 1931) is a Luxembourgian historian.[1] He is the best-known of the post-World War II generation of Luxembourg historians, and he and other colleagues of this generation such as Paul Margue brought a new concern for Luxembourg's international relations to their study of its history.[2]
Trausch studied outside Luxembourg, and then taught at the same secondary school as Margue in the 1950s. Later, he was associated with the Centre Universitaire du Luxembourg and the National Library of Luxembourg,[2] and was a Professor at the College of Europe.
Partial publication list
- Trausch, Gilbert. 1975. Le Luxembourg à l'époque contemporaine, du partage de 1839 à nos jours. Luxembourg: Editions Bourg-Bourger.
- Trausch, Gilbert. 1977. Le Luxembourg sous l'Ancien Régime. Luxembourg: Bourg-Bourger.
- Trausch, Gilbert. 1992. Histoire du Luxembourg. Paris: Hatier.
- Trausch, Gilbert. 2003. Histoire du Luxembourg : le destin européen d'un petit pays. Toulouse: Privat.
References
- ↑ Wehenkel, Henri (1982), "Gilbert Trausch, historien du vingtième siècle", Argumenter : Cahiers du Centre Jean Kill 2: 57–73.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Péporté, Pit (2010), Inventing Luxembourg: Representations of the Past, Space and Language from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century, National Cultivation of Culture 1, BRILL, pp. 110–112, ISBN 9789004181762.
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