Terence Ranger | |
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Born | Terence Osborn Ranger 29 November 1929 South Norwood (London), United Kingdom |
Died | 3 January 2015 Oxford, United Kingdom | (aged 85)
Education | Royal Grammar School High Wycombe; The Queen's College, Oxford |
Occupation(s) | Historian, Africanist |
Terence "Terry" Osborn Ranger FBA (29 November 1929 – 3 January 2015) was a prominent British Africanist, best known as a historian of Zimbabwe. Part of the post-colonial generation of historians, his work spanned the pre- and post-Independence (1980) period in Zimbabwe, from the 1960s to the present. He published and edited dozens of books and wrote hundreds of articles and book chapters, including co-editing The Invention of Tradition (1983) with Eric Hobsbawm. He was the Rhodes Professor of Race Relations at the University of Oxford and the first Africanist fellow of the British Academy.