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Vartan
Gregorian
President
Vartan
Gregorian is the twelfth president of Carnegie Corporation of New
York, a grant-making institution founded by Andrew Carnegie in 1911.
Prior to his current position, which he assumed in June 1997, Gregorian
served for nine years as the sixteenth president of Brown University.
He
was born in Tabriz, Iran, of Armenian parents, receiving his elementary
education in Iran and his secondary education in Lebanon. In 1956
he entered Stanford University, where he majored in history and
the humanities, graduating with honors in 1958. He was awarded a
Ph.D. in history and humanities from Stanford in 1964.
Gregorian
has taught European and Middle Eastern history at San Francisco
State College, the University of California at Los Angeles, and
the University of Texas at Austin. In 1972 he joined the University
of Pennsylvania faculty and was appointed Tarzian Professor of History
and professor of South Asian history. He was founding dean of the
Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania in
1974 and four years later became its twenty-third provost until
1981.
For
eight years (1981-1989), Gregorian served as a president of the
New York Public Library, an institution with a network of four research
libraries and eighty-three circulating libraries. In 1989 he was
appointed president of Brown University.
Gregorian
is the author of The Road To Home: My Life And Times, Islam:
A Mosaic, Not A Monolith, and The Emergence of Modern Afghanistan,
1880-1946. A Phi Beta Kappa and a Ford Foundation Foreign Area
Training Fellow, he is a recipient of numerous fellowships, including
those from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, the American Council
of Learned Societies, the Social Science Research Council and the
American Philosophical Society. He is a Fellow of the American Academy
of Arts of Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society. In
1969, he received the Danforth Foundation’s E.H. Harbison
Distinguished Teaching Award.
He
serves on the boards of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton,
Human Rights Watch, The World Trade Center Memorial Foundation,
and the Museum of Modern Art. He served on the boards of the J.
Paul Getty Trust, the Aga Khan University, The McGraw-Hill Companies,
and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He has been decorated
by the French, Italian, Austrian and Portuguese governments. His
numerous civic and academic honors include some fifty-six honorary
degrees, including those from Brown, Dartmouth, Drew, Johns Hopkins,
University of Pennsylvania, the Jewish Theological Seminary, the
City University of New York, Rutgers, Tufts, New York University,
University of Aberdeen, The Juilliard School, the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Fordham University, The Pennsylvania
State University and San Francisco State University.
In
1986, Gregorian was awarded the Ellis Island Medal of Honor and
in 1989 the American Academy of the Institute of Arts and Letters’
Gold Medal for Service to the Arts. In 1998, President Clinton awarded
him the National Humanities Medal. In 2004, President Bush awarded
him the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civil award.
He has been honored by various cultural and professional associations,
including the Urban League, the League of Women Voters, the Players
Club, PEN-American Center, Literacy Volunteers of New York, the
American Institute of Architects and the Charles A. Dana Foundation.
He has been honored by the city and state of New York, the states
of Massachusetts, Texas, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island, and the
cities of Fresno, Austin, Providence and San Francisco.
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