Bayard Dodge

Bayard Dodge (1888–1972) was an American scholar of Islam and president of the American University in Beirut.

Background
The son of Cleveland Hoadley Dodge and Grace Wainwright Parish, he graduated from Princeton University in 1909.

Career
In 1923 Dodge succeed his father-in-law, Howard Bliss, to become the president of a university in Beirut then known as the Syrian Protestant College. His great uncle, Reverend David Stuart Dodge, had been one of the first professors to teach at the faculty in the 1860s. Dorothy Rowntree, the first woman engineering graduate from the University of Glasgow, worked as Bayard Dodge's personal assistant at the university in Beirut.

After his retirement from the presidency in 1948 he continued teaching at several universities. His son, David S. Dodge, later served the same role.

Works

 * The American University of Beirut: A Brief History of the University and the Lands Which It Serves, Beirut, Khayat's, 1958
 * Aspects of the Fatimid Philosophy, The Muslim World, L, No.3 (Jul, 1960)
 * Al-Azhar Mosque: A Millennium of Muslim Learning. Washington, Middle East Institute (1961) – a comprehensive history of the world famous university mosque of Cairo.
 * The Fatimid Hierarchy and Exegesis, The Muslim World, L, No.2 (Apr, 1960), pp. 130–41
 * The Fatimid Legal Code, ibid., L, No.1 (Jan 1960), pp. 30–38
 * Al-Isma'iliyah and the Origin of the Fatimids, ibid, XLIX, No.4 (Oct 1959), pp. 295–305
 * Muslim Education in Medieval Times, Washington, Middle East Institute, 1962
 * The Sabians of Harran in Sarruf, ed., American University of Beirut Festival Book: Festschrift, pp. 60–85.
 * The Fihrist of al-Nadīm: A Tenth-Century Survey of Islamic Culture. An English translation of the 10th-century Arabic encyclopedia by the Baghdadī bibliophile, Ibn Ishāq al-Nadīm.