Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for historiographer. Search instead for historistischen.
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

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

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

In 1702 Robert Stephens, the Court historiographer, published a volume of Bacon's letters, with an introduction giving some account of his life; and there was a second edition in 1736.

From The Mystery of Francis Bacon by Smedley, William T.