Felipe Fernández-Armesto
Felipe Fernández-Armesto (born 1950) is a British historian and author of several popular works of revisionist history.
Life and career
He was born in London, his father was the Spanish journalist Felipe Fernández Armesto and his mother was Betty Millan de Fernandez-Armesto, a British-born journalist and co-founder and editor of The Diplomatist, the in-house journal of the diplomatic corps in London.
Felipe Fernandez-Armesto joined the history department at the University of Notre Dame in 2009, after occupying chairs at Tufts University and the University of London (Queen Mary College). He had spent most of his career teaching at Oxford, where he was an undergraduate and doctoral student. He has had visiting appointments at many universities and research institutes in Europe and the Americas, and has honorary doctorates from La Trobe University and the Universidad de los Andes. He began his teaching career at Charterhouse School in Godalming, Surrey.
In 1982 he published 'The Canary Islands after the Conquest: The Making of a Colonial Society in the Early Sixteenth Century', an archival study of the Canary Islands during the period of their original settlement. In 1987 he published 'Before Columbus: Exploration and Colonization from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic 1229-1492', a study of the earliest phase of European imperialism when Europeans left the Mediterranean and colonized the islands along the northwest coast of Africa.
Fernández-Armesto gained media attention in 2007 for his alleged brutalising by five policemen in Atlanta, Georgia, as a result of jaywalking.[1][2]
Awards and honours
Among other distinctions, Fernández-Armesto has won the John Carter Brown Medal, the Caird Medal of the National Maritime Museum (UK), the Premio Nacional an Investigacion of the Sociedad Geográfica Española, Soain's Premio Nacional de Gastronomia for his history of food, and the Tercentenary Medal of the Society of Antiquaries of London.
- 2008: Universidad de los Andes, honorary doctorate
- 2007: World History Association Book Prize, Pathfinders: A Global History of Exploration "
Selected works
- The Canary Islands after the Conquest (1982)
- The Spanish Armada (1990)
- Columbus (1991)
- Barcelona (1991)
- Millennium: A History of Our Last Thousand Years (1995)
- Reformation: Christianity & the World 1500 - 2000 (1996) (co-authored with Derek Wilson)
- Truth: A History and a Guide for the Perplexed (1997)
- Civilizations (2000).
- Food: A History (published as "Near a Thousand Tables" in US/Can) (2001).
- The Americas: A Hemispheric History (2003) ISBN 0-375-50476-1
- Ideas That Changed the World (2003).
- Humankind: A brief History (2004).
- Pathfinders: a Global History of Exploration (2006) ISBN 0-19-929590-5
- The World: A Brief History (2007)
- Amerigo: The Man Who Gave His Name to America (2007)
- 1492. The Year the World Began (2009)
- Our America: A Hispanic History of the United States (2014)
As editor
- A History of England (1997–2002)
- The Times guide to the peoples of Europe (1994)
References
- ↑ History News Network video interview with Professor Fernández-Armesto describing his arrest for jaywalking at the American Historical Association in Atlanta in January 2007.
- ↑ The Telegraph - Historian 'pinned to ground by US police and beaten for jaywalking'
External links
- Biography at Springerlink
- An interview with TMCQ: "With my usual intellectual perversity, I thought it would be interesting to have a history of the world written from an imaginary perspective. I am interested in shifting perspective. I do believe in objective historical reality. I do believe that the truth is out there and I’m absolutely not a relativist or a postmodernist."
- An interview with Spiked magazine: "I defend people's right to deny the Holocaust and to utter lies — so long as the rest of us remain aware that what they're saying is a lie."
- Truth and Authenticity Pulse Berlin
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