Aleksander Loit (11 June 1925 â 16 January 2021) was an Estonian-born Swedish historian whose research focused on Estonia and Sweden, especially the early modern Baltic provinces during Swedish rule in Swedish Estonia and Swedish Livonia within the Swedish Empire.
He taught at Uppsala University and later became professor of Baltic history at Stockholm University, where he also led the universityâÂÂs Baltic Studies environment and helped build scholarly networks across the Baltic Sea region. A festschrift in his honour was published in 2000 by Stockholm University.
Loit was born in Pärnu. His birth surname was Sitan; the family name was officially changed to Loit in 1936. He completed secondary school in Tallinn during World War II and left Estonia for Sweden in 1944.
He entered Uppsala University in 1945 and completed his studies in history there, later continuing with graduate research. His doctoral dissertation, defended in 1975, examined reduction policy and crown domain administration in Estonia in 1655âÂÂ1710.
From the mid-1950s Loit taught at Uppsala University, and sources note that his teaching included SwedenâÂÂs crown prince, the future King Carl XVI Gustaf, during the princeâÂÂs special study programme at Uppsala.
In 1981 Loit became director of the Baltic Research Centre attached to Stockholm University and served as professor of Baltic history. His work at Stockholm is described in Swedish and Estonian academic accounts as combining research with academic organisation, including conferences, editorial work and support for Baltic scholarship during and after the Cold War period.
LoitâÂÂs scholarship centred on the Swedish Baltic provinces, with particular attention to political economy, governance and social change in seventeenth-century Estonia and Livonia. He also published on later SwedishâÂÂEstonian relations and on Baltic German political institutions during the period of Estonian independence.
His editorial activity included the publication series Studia Baltica Stockholmiensia, where he served as editor-in-chief for early volumes and remained closely involved with the series and its conference network.
Loit received Uppsala UniversityâÂÂs Geijer history prize, awarded for doctoral-level historical scholarship. He was named an honorary doctor of the University of Tartu in 1989 and of àbo Akademi University in 1993.
In 1994 he received Hertig Karls pris i historia, later titled Stora historiepriset. In 2001 he was awarded the Order of the White Star, III class, by the President of Estonia.