Neilson Debevoise
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Neilson Carel Debevoise (November 8, 1903 – December 10, 1992) was an American historian of ancient Mesopotamia and Iran, and subsequently a military intelligence officer.. Born in 1903 in Jersey City, New Jersey, Jersey City, he studied at the University of Illinois, where he completed his doctoral dissertation, "Parthian Problems", under the supervision of Albert T. Olmstead, Albert Ten Eyck Olmstead in 1929. In 1938, he published ''A Political History of Parthia'', a seminal history of the Parthian Empire. He joined the US Military Intelligence Service (United States), Military Intelligence Service during World War II; in the course of the war he was posted in Egypt. He continued his work in intelligence in the postwar period, abandoning his academic career—his last journal contribution was published in 1947—and he worked for the United States Department of State, Department of State and the United States National Security Council, National Security Council into the 1960s. Little is known of his activities in this capacity, though he was a member of the Operations Coordinating Board in 1954–58. He died in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, on December 10, 1992. Debevoise's ''Political History of Parthia'' was the first comprehensive history of the Parthian Empire to be written since George Rawlinson's ''The Sixth Great Oriental Monarchy'' (1873), published 65 years previously. It became the standard work on the topic,. and was translated into Persian language, Persian in 1963. In 2008, Valery P. Nikonorov published a Russian translation of the ''Political History'' with an extensive bibliographical supplement on scholarship on the empire since 1938. In his introduction to the translation, Nikonorov calls Debevoise's work "totally unique for its time", and praises the book for its "high scientific level" and "breadth of coverage and depth of interpretation"..


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* * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Debevoise, Neilson Carel 1903 births 1992 deaths Historians of Iran United States Department of State officials United States National Security Council staffers University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign alumni Military personnel from New Jersey Writers from Jersey City, New Jersey American expatriates in Egypt