Jacqueline de Romilly
Jacqueline de Romilly | |
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Académie française |
Jacqueline Worms de Romilly (French:
She is primarily known for her work on the culture and language of ancient Greece, and in particular on Thucydides.
Biography
Born in
After being a schoolteacher, she became a professor at
She published dozens of works on Greek philosophy, language and literature but her lifelong passion was Thucydides, the historian of the Peloponnesian War.
Outside academia she was best known to the French public for touring French schools and giving talks about the culture of ancient Greeks. She was a staunch defender of teaching of humanities in French schools, believing that an understanding of the classics was essential to understanding democracy, the liberty of the individual and the virtue of tolerance.
She was horrified by the 1988 vote to simplify aspects of the French language in primary schools and in 1992 she founded an Association for the Defence of Literary Studies.[8]
In 1995, she obtained
After having only received baptism in 1940, she fully converted to Maronite Catholicism in 2008, aged 95.[10][11]
Influence
De Romilly's two monographs on the ancient Greek historian Thucydides have been credited with "alter[ing] the landscape of Thucydidean scholarship"[12] and "the beginning of a new era".[13] In 2002, Danish classical scholar Anders Holm Rasmussen described her views on Thucydides' ideology of empire as still "one of the most important viewpoints" with which modern scholars can engage.[14] Published first in 1956, her work Histoire et raison chez Thucydide is still in print in the original French today, and was translated into English as The Mind of Thucydides after her death.[15][16] De Romilly believed that Thucydides's intelligent, reflective approach held lessons relevant to the Europe of today.
De Romilly also published outside the field of
In 2016, Rosie Wyles and Edith Hall edited a volume called Women Classical Scholars: Unsealing the Fountain from the Renaissance to Jacqueline de Romilly, a history of pioneering women born between the Renaissance and 1913 who played significant roles in the history of classical scholarship.[19]
Honours and awards
- Ambatielos Prize of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres (1948)
- Croiset Prize of the Institut de France (1969)
- Langlois Prize of the Académie française (1974)
- First woman member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres (1975)
- Elected member of the American Philosophical Society (1978)[20]
- Austrian Decoration for Science and Art (1981)[21]
- Grand Prize of the Académie française (1984)
- President of the Academy of Inscriptions and Belles-Lettres (1987)
- Elected to the Académie française(24 November 24, 1988)
- Elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1988)[22]
- Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1988)[23]
- Onassis Prize(Athens, 1995) - prize for her struggle to preserve teaching of ancient Greek and Latin.
- Appointed by Greece as Ambassador of Hellenism (2000) (she had received citizenship in 1995)
- Daudet Prizefor defence of the French language (2000)
- Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour (2007)
- Prize of the Greek Parliament (2008)
- Grand Cross of the Ordre national du Mérite
- Commander of the Ordre des Palmes Académiques
- Commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres
- Commander of the Order of the Phoenix (Greece)
- Commander of the Order of Honour (Greece)
- First woman professor at the Collège de France (Chair: Greece and the formation of the moral and political thought)
- Corresponding member of foreign academies: Denmark, Great Britain, Vienna, Athens, Bavaria, the Netherlands, Naples, Turin, Genoa and the United States.
- Montreal and Yale University
Personal life
De Romilly's father, a philosophy professor, was killed in action in the First World War when De Romilly was only one year old. Her mother was a novelist who published under the name Jeanne Maxime-David.
In 1940 she married Michel de Romilly, a marriage that ended in divorce in the 1970s.[24]
Works published in English translation
De Romilly's work was largely published in French, but some of her works were written in or translated into English:[25]
Books
- Thucydides and Athenian Imperialism, translated by P. Thody. Oxford, 1963.
- Time in Greek Tragedy (Messenger Lectures). Cornell, 1968.
- Magic and Rhetoric in Ancient Greece (Carl Newell Jackson Lectures). Cambridge, MA, 1975.
- The Rise and Fall of States According to Greek Authors (Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures). Ann Arbor, 1977.
- A Short History of Greek Literature, translated by L. Doherty. Chicago, 1985.
- The Great Sophists in Periclean Athens, translated by J. Lloyd. Oxford, 1991.
- The Mind of Thucydides, translated by E. T. Rawlings. Cornell, 2012.
- The Life of Alcibiades: Dangerous Ambition and the Betrayal of Athens, translated by Elizabeth Trapnell Rawlings. Cornell, 2019.
Articles
- "Thucydides and the Cities of the Athenian Empire", in BICS 13 (1966) 1–12.
- "Phoenician Women of Euripides: Topicality in Greek Tragedy", translated by D. H. Orrok, in Bucknell Review 15 (1967) 108–132.
- "Fairness and Kindness in Thucydides", in Phoenix 28 (1974) 95–100.
- "Plato and Conjuring", in K. V. Erickson (ed.), Plato: True and Sophistic Rhetoric. Amsterdam, 1979.
- "Agamemnon in Doubt and Hesitation", in P. Pucci (ed.), Language and the Tragic Hero: Essays on Greek Tragedy in Honor of Gordon M. Kirkwood, 25–37. Atlanta, 1988.
- "Isocrates and Europe", in Greece & Rome 39 (1992) 2–13.
References
- ^ "French Scholar Jacqueline de Romilly Dies at 97" Los Angeles Times 20 December 2010
- ISBN 9780198725206.
- ^ "D’origine juive, elle est suspendue de ses fonctions par le régime de Vichy en 1941."
- ISBN 9780520236851.
- ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2019-08-09.
- ^ "L'Enseignement en détresse (1984)". www.samuelhuet.com. February 2004. Retrieved 2019-08-09.
- ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2019-08-09.
- ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2019-08-09.
- ^ "Jacqueline de Romilly, helléniste et académicienne, est morte". Le Monde. 19 December 2010. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
- ^ "Dossier. Jacqueline de Romilly, une Athénienne au XXe siècle". La Croix. Archived from the original on December 24, 2010. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
- ^ "Réaction du P. Mansour Labaky au décès de Jacqueline de Romilly". La Croix. Archived from the original on 24 December 2010. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
- S2CID 231892164.
- ^ Rijksbaron, Albert (2011). "Introduction". In Lalot; Rijksbaron; Jacquinod; Buijs (eds.). The historical present in Thucydides: semantics and narrative function'. Leiden: Brill. p. 1.
- ^ Holm Rasmussen, Anders (2002). "Thucydides' Conception of the Peloponnesian War I. Imperialism". Classica et Mediaevalia. 52: 85.
- ^ "The Mind of Thucydides'". Cornell University Press (blurb).
- ^ "The Mind of Thucydides (First published 1956). Cornell studies in classical philology – Bryn Mawr Classical Review". Bryn Mawr Classical Review.
- ISBN 9782953384611.
- ^ Magnus, Erica W. (2016). "Time, Cognition, and Attic Performance: Tracing a New Approach to Theatre History's "Vexing Question"". In Gross, S.; Ostovich, S. (eds.). Time and Trace: Multidisciplinary Investigations of Temporality. Leiden: Brill.
- ISBN 9780198725206.
- ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2022-07-15.
- ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (PDF) (in German). p. 626. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
- ^ "Jacqueline de Romilly". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2022-07-15.
- ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter D" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
- ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2019-08-09.
- L'Année Philologique
External links
- L'Académie française (in French)