David Diringer | |
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| Born | (1900-06-16)16 June 1900 |
| Died | 13 February 1975(1975-02-13) (aged 74) Cambridge, England, UK |
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David Diringer (16 June 1900 – 13 February 1975) was a Britishlinguist,palaeographer and writer. He was the author of several well-known books aboutwriting systems.
Diringer was born to Jacob Munzer and Mirl Diringer on 16 June 1900, inTlumacz – at that time considered part of Austria, later Poland, but now Tlumach, Ukraine.[1] He stayed in Tlumacz through high school but moved to Italy to earn, in 1927, hisDoctor of Literature degree from theUniversity of Florence. This was followed, in 1929, by a diploma in ancient history.[2] He was appointed a professor at Florence (1931–1933), his first academic interest being the culture of theEtruscans.[3] He did excavations in Tuscany from 1930 to 1939.[2]
As anti-Jewish policies were put in place in Italy, he moved to England in 1939.[3] His two brothers who remained in Tlumacz were both lost in theholocaust.[4] In England he was at first, as an Italian citizen, interned on theIsle of Man as an "enemy alien." But he was released in November 1940[1] and actually then worked for theBritish Foreign Office.[2]
After the war, he lectured inSemitic epigraphy atCambridge University, establishing the Alphabet Museum there.[3] It was while at Cambridge that he published most of his works on writing andwriting systems. Three years before his death, he moved the Alphabet Museum toTel Aviv, where he had a second residence.[2]
When his magnum opus,The Alphabet: A Key to the History of Mankind, was published in 1948, it was greeted with effusive praise. In reviewing the book,Thomas Sebeok enthused: "There are few comprehensive studies on this subject in the English language sinceIsaac Taylor's fundamental contribution in 1883. But this book does much more than merely fill a gap: it is bound to stand as the most authoritative treatment of the history of alphabetic writing for a long time to come. This is because the book is extraordinarily scholarly and exhaustive. It is, incidentally, also quite exciting to read."[5]William F. Albright had this to say in his review: "This great work ... will certainly displace all other books in its field for some time to come, at least for librarians and general readers. It contains an extraordinary mass of material in over 600 compactly printed pages...."[6]
Diringer died inCambridge, England, an emeritus professor at Cambridge, on 13 February 1975 and was survived by his wife Elena (née Cecchini), and daughter Kedma.[2][7]
The following biography appears on the back dust-jacket flap ofWriting (1962):
David Diringer, M.A. (Cantab.), D.Litt. (Florence), was educated in Florence, to which University he subsequently returned, first as Lecturer, then as Professor. He has taught [...] in England, on the Continent, in the [US], and elsewhere. He was Secretary at the First International Congress of Etruscan Studies (1928) and at the first three Congresses of Colonial Studies in Italy (1931, 1934, 1937). Since 1948, Dr. Diringer has been Lecturer in Semitic Epigraphy at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of several books, includingThe Early Hebrew Inscriptions (1934) [and]The Alphabet in the History of Civilization (1937), and of more than 200 contributions to learned journals. Dr. Diringer is the founder and director of the Alphabet Museum at Cambridge.
See also his obituary in the (London) Times 19th February 1975