Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Zvi Yavetz

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Citizenship
  
Israel

Died
  
January 7, 2013, Israel

Name
  
Zvi Yavetz

Alma mater
  
Hebrew University

Institutions
  
Tel Aviv University


Zvi Yavetz wwwynetnewscomPicServer3201301084385445111

Known for
  
studies on ancient history

Education
  
Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Books
  
Julius Caesar and his public image, Plebs and princeps

Zvi Yavetz (26 April 1925 – 7 January 2013) was a leading Israeli historian, emeritus professor of ancient history at Tel Aviv University and a Holocaust survivor.

Contents

Zvi Yavetz httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons33

Biography

Zvi Yavetz was born in Czernowitz, Ukraine, in 1925. At age five, he experienced a serious health-problem, polio, and also, his father committed suicide. After the German invasion in 1941, he was detained in camps with his family. His relatives, including his mother, were killed in the Holocaust, but he could escape the country in 1944. He went to Turkey and then was transferred to Cyprus. Eventually, he could come to the British Mandate of Palestine, now known as Israel. Initially, he lived in the Jordan valley as part of a kibbutz. Then he left for Jerusalem to study modern history.

During his university education, Yavetz worked as a teacher for deaf and dumb children. He received his master's degree and PhD in history, classics and sociology from Hebrew University, in 1950 and 1956, respectively. He carried out post-doctoral studies at the University of London and Lund University in 1960.

Yavetz died on 7 January 2013. He was buried at Kibbutz Tel Yitzhak cemetery on 10 January 2013.

Academic and literary career

After completing his PhD., Yavets was asked to help in establishing Tel Aviv University, and is one of the founders of the university. In 1956, he was named the department chair of general history and later, dean of humanities faculty at the university.

In 2008, Yavetz published his autobiography, My Czernowitz. He adopted his mother's family name, Yavetz, when he learned that all members of her family had been killed in the Holocaust.

Awards

In 1990, Yavetz was awarded the Israel prize for humanities. In 1997, he was given doctorate (Honoris Causa) from Beer Sheba University and Munich University.

References

Zvi Yavetz Wikipedia