Gedaliah Alon | |
---|---|
Native name | גדליה אלון |
Born | Gedaliah Rogozitski 1901 Kobryn, Russian-ruled Poland |
Died | 17 March 1950 Israel | (aged 48–49)
Occupation | Historian |
Language | Hebrew |
Citizenship | Israeli |
Notable awards | Israel Prize (1953) |
Gedaliah Alon ( Hebrew: גדליה אלון; 1901–1950) was an Israeli historian.
Gedaliah Rogoznitski (later Alon) was born in 1901 in Kobryn, Belarus (then in Russian-ruled Poland). In 1924, he studied for a year at Berlin University and, in 1926, he emigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine and continued his studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He later joined the faculty of the Hebrew University.
In 1953, three years after his death, Alon was posthumously awarded the Israel Prize for Jewish studies, [1] the inaugural year of the prize.
Gedaliah Alon | |
---|---|
Native name | גדליה אלון |
Born | Gedaliah Rogozitski 1901 Kobryn, Russian-ruled Poland |
Died | 17 March 1950 Israel | (aged 48–49)
Occupation | Historian |
Language | Hebrew |
Citizenship | Israeli |
Notable awards | Israel Prize (1953) |
Gedaliah Alon ( Hebrew: גדליה אלון; 1901–1950) was an Israeli historian.
Gedaliah Rogoznitski (later Alon) was born in 1901 in Kobryn, Belarus (then in Russian-ruled Poland). In 1924, he studied for a year at Berlin University and, in 1926, he emigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine and continued his studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He later joined the faculty of the Hebrew University.
In 1953, three years after his death, Alon was posthumously awarded the Israel Prize for Jewish studies, [1] the inaugural year of the prize.