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Walter Scheidel

Walter Scheidel
Scheidel at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting of the New Champions in 2012
Born (1966-07-09) 9 July 1966 (age 58)
Vienna, Austria
NationalityAustrian
Alma materUniversity of Vienna
Scientific career
FieldsHistorian
InstitutionsStanford University

Walter Scheidel (born 9 July 1966) is an Austrian historian who teaches ancient history at Stanford University, California. Scheidel's main research interests are ancient social and economic history, pre-modern historical demography, and comparative and transdisciplinary approaches to world history.[1]

Biography

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From 1984 to 1993, Scheidel studied Ancient History and numismatics at the University of Vienna, where he obtained his doctorate in 1993. In 1998, he completed his habilitation at the University of Graz. From 1990 until 1994, he worked as an administrative and research assistant at the University of Vienna. As an Erwin Schrödinger Fellow of the Austrian Research Council, he spent 1995 as a visiting scholar at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. From 1996 to 1999, he was Moses and Mary Finley Research Fellow in Ancient History at Darwin College, Cambridge. During this period, he also served as visiting professor at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris and the University of Innsbruck.

Scheidel moved to the United States in 1999, where he initially held visiting positions at Stanford University and the University of Chicago. In 2003, he took up his current position in the Department of Classics of Stanford University, where he was promoted to professor in 2004 and received an endowed chair, the Dickason Professorship in the Humanities, in 2008. He is also a Kennedy-Grossman Fellow in Stanford's Human Biology program.

Scheidel has published five academic monographs and over 200 papers and reviews and has edited or co-edited fifteen other books. He is co-editor of a monograph series for Oxford University Press and was co-founder of the Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics,[2] the world's first online repository for working papers in that field.[3] In May 2012, Scheidel and Elijah Meeks launched the interactive website ORBIS: The Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World.[4] He has been awarded a New Directions Fellowship of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and is a Corresponding Member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.

Reception

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The Great Leveler was shortlisted for the Cundill History Prize 2017[5] and for the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year 2017.[6] One of The Economist's Books of the Year 2017,[7] it was selected by Martin Wolf as his Financial Times Summer Book of 2017.[8] William Easterly wrote in a review of The Great Leveler, which argues that violence is the main contributor to declines in inequality, that "the great virtue of the book is to present a lot of evidence on both sides for the readers to judge the thesis for themselves."[9]

The Financial Times[10] and the Evening Standard[11] named Escape from Rome one of their best books of 2019. In his review, Robert Colvile noted that although “Scheidel has to do an awful lot of heavy lifting” in his book, it “is a measure of Scheidel’s talent and dedication that, by and large, he succeeds.”[12] Escape From Rome was panned by fellow historian Felipe Fernández-Armesto who accuses Scheidel of wholesale oversimplification, "cutting through the chaos of real life and dismissing its messiness."[13] Paolo Tedesco of the University of Tübingen, reviewing the book, described it as "stimulating [and] thought provoking", although he considered that its historical arguments were not convincing.[14]

Works

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Publications

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Personal website at Department of Classics, Stanford University
  2. ^ Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics
  3. ^ Ober, Josiah; Scheidel, Walter; Shaw, Brent D.; Sanclemente, Donna (2007). "Toward Open Access in Ancient Studies: The Princeton-Stanford Working Papers in Classics". Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 76 (1): 229–242. doi:10.2972/hesp.76.1.229. ISSN 0018-098X. JSTOR 25068017.
  4. ^ ORBIS: The Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World
  5. ^ “The Cundill History Prize”
  6. ^ "Best Business Books: 2017". Financial Times. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  7. ^ "Books of the Year 2017". The Economist. 2021-12-09. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  8. ^ "The FT on books to read this summer". Financial Times. 2017-06-23. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  9. ^ Easterly, William (2019). "Review of Walter Scheidel's The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century". Journal of Economic Literature. 57 (4): 955–971. doi:10.1257/jel.20191477. ISSN 0022-0515.
  10. ^ "Best books of 2019: Economics". Financial Times. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  11. ^ "The best books of 2019". Evening Standard. 2019-12-23. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  12. ^ Colvile, Robert (2019-10-18). "Escape from Rome by Walter Scheidel Review – How Rome's Fall Supercharged the West". Sunday Times. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  13. ^ Fernández-Armesto, Felipe (2019-10-23). "'Escape From Rome' Review: Charging Ahead". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2020-04-18.
  14. ^ Tedesco, Paolo (2021-02-25). "The Roman Road to Capitalism and the Rise of the West". Jacobin. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
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