Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for historiographer. Search instead for historienbildern.
Definitions

historiographer

[hi-stawr-ee-og-ruh-fer, -stohr-] / hɪˌstɔr iˈɒg rə fər, -ˌstoʊr- /
NOUN
chronicler
Synonyms


NOUN
historian
Synonyms
Antonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“This is a natural outgrowth of this earlier forging of a much closer alliance between the civil rights movement and labor,” said Dickerson, the former historiographer for the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

From Washington Post • Aug. 12, 2022

Into that circle now steps Lepore, a professor of history at Harvard who, since 1999, has written for the New Yorker as a kind of unofficial national historiographer.

From Washington Post • Jun. 2, 2016

Such a meeting of the church's leaders on a single, urgent topic is "very, very rare," says the Rev. J. Robert Wright, official historiographer of the Episcopal Church.

From Time Magazine Archive

Arnold J. Toynbee, wispy British historiographer whose magnum opus, A Study of History, is six volumes long already, arrived in the U.S. to work on the final three volumes.

From Time Magazine Archive

He was born in 1475, held posts in the household of the Governors of the Netherlands, was historiographer to Louis XII., and died either in 1524 or in 1548.

From A Short History of French Literature by Saintsbury, George