Naphtali Lewis

Naphtali Lewis (14 December 1911 – 11 September 2005) was an American papyrologist who published extensively on subjects ranging from the ancient papyrus industry to government in Roman Egypt. He also wrote several social histories of Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt to make his research more accessible to non-specialists. He was married to the psychoanalyst Helen Block Lewis (1913–1987), and they had two children, John Block Lewis and Judith Lewis Herman, a physician who followed in her mother's professional footsteps.[1][2]

Early Studies

Lewis did his undergraduate studies in classical languages and French at City College of New York (AB,magna cum laude 1930) and earned an MA at Columbia (1932). He generally found the lectures rather mechanical but his curiosity in what was to become the object of a lifelong research interest was stirred where he did course work in his final year, when he read, together with Meyer Reinhold and Moses Finkelstein, the Zenon papyri under the direction of William Linn Westermann.

Europe, 1933–1936

Lewis pursued further postgraduate studies in Europe with a fellowship from the American Field Service.[3] After receiving a certificate at the University of Strasbourg (1933), he went to Paris where he pursued his studies on papyrology under Paul Collart, and more generally, trained as an historian under Gustave Glotz.[3] His first work, a doctoral thesis in French, was L'industrie du papyrus dans l'Égypte gréco-romaine (Paris,1934), a study of the papyrus plant and how it was manufactured and used for writing.[4] He published an English version of his thesis much later in 1974 under the title Papyrus in Classical Antiquity. He spoke French fluently but with a Bronx accent.

He then moved to Rome and furthered his research for 2 years at the American Academy in Rome, working on the Fouad papyri.[3] He also managed to travel widely at this time, visiting the Mediterranean, travelling through the Levant and Palestine and sojourning in Istanbul and Athens.

Return to the United States

On returning to the United States, where the effects of the Depression made empoloyment difficult, he did odd jobs and filled part-time posts until, in 1928, Casper Kraemer managed to get him a post at New York University on the recommendation that he conduct research on the Karanis papyri. There he made a lifelong friendship with Lionel Casson.[3] When WW2 broke out he became a translator for the Engineer Corps, and later head of war research at Columbia University.[3]

Postwar Period

From 1947 until 1976 Lewis taught at Brooklyn College (whence he retired as Distinguished Professor) and was also involved in the City University's Graduate School. He served as president of the American Society of Papyrologists (1965–1969) and as president of the Association Internationale de Papyrologues (1974–1983). His wife was summoned in 1953 to be interrogated during the McCarthyist witch-hunt to respond to interrogations about possible Communist connections, but refused to answer, pleading the Fifth Amendment.[2]

After his wife's death in 1987, Lewis suffered a heart attack, but on regaining his health married Ruth Markel, who was to predecease him, passing away in 2004.[3] In retirement, he continued to conduct research and publish, and also taught papyrology and ancient history as a visiting professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara.[5]

Selected works

Full Bibliography

Citations

  1. Judith Lewis Herman, Father- Daughter Incest, Harvard University Press, 2012 p.x.
  2. 1 2 Judith Lewis Herman, M.D., 'Helen Block Lewis: A Memoir of Three Generations,' Psychoanalytic Psychology, Vol. 30, 2013 pp. 528–534.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Roger S. Bagnall, 'Naphtali Lewis (1911–2005),' The Bulletin of the American Society of Papyrologists, Vol. 43, 2006 pp. 5–8.
  4. J. David Thomas, 'Naphtali Lewis: 1911–2005,' in Aegyptus, Vol. 86 (2006), Vita e Pensiero – Pubblicazioni dell'Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore pp. 217–221, p.217.
  5. Alan K. Bowman, "Naphtali Lewis (1911–2005)," Classical World 100 (2007): 446–448

References

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