NOTA BENE:
I asked you a question and I am very interested in your answer. Really!
Thank you.
By
"genuine historian" I mean any university lecturer and researcher, with a least a doctorate in mainstream history, and who works in a mainstream history department studying and researching in mainstream history. Not someone who's qualifications are in bible-studies and similar religious issues, who teaches in a bible-studies department or similar religiously oriented department of a university or religious institute or theological seminary.
And by
"mainstream history" I mean any academic areas of history, ancient or modern, which are of interest to non-biblical non-religiously interested historians, such that the work is typically published in journals and as papers that are not specifically or mainly of interest to religion and religiously interested people (whether academics such as bible studies teachers and theologians, religious hierarchy such as senior bishops, the Pope, and other church officials, and religious people in general such as devout Christians interested in what bible-studies teachers write and say about the historicity of Jesus and veracity or otherwise of the bible).
IOW - the sort of academics who are employed in university history departments. And not the sort of people employed in bible-studies departments or religious wings of history departments or theological institutes.
Example - people like Bart Ehrman, who calls himself a historian, is actually a bible studies scholar, because all his qualifications are in bible studies, theology and other religious issues, and he teaches bible studies in a university bible studies department (not in any mainstream history department). In contrast, university lecturers who teach and research, for example, the history of Roman emperors and their lives, conquests & politics etc., in the history departments at Oxford, Cambridge and London universities, are
“genuine mainstream historians” … afaik there is nothing to stop any of those
"genuine historians" researching and publishing papers about any aspects of Jesus historicity or historical research on biblical writing or related writing from that period, though afaik they rarely stray into those religious areas.