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Dutch Egyptologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adriaan de Buck (Oostkapelle, 22 September 1892 – Leiden, 28 October 1959) was an eminent Dutch Egyptologist. From 1939 he was Professor of Egyptology at Leiden University.
Adriaan de Buck | |
---|---|
Born | Oostkapelle, the Netherlands | 22 September 1892
Died | 28 October 1959 67) Leiden, the Netherlands | (aged
Nationality | Dutch |
Occupation | Egyptologist |
Years active | 1922–1959 |
Spouse | Anna Elisabeth Nordenberg |
Children | Ann-Kjersti, Ingrid and Pieter de Buck |
Awards | KNAW member |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | Leiden University |
Thesis | De Egyptische voorstellingen betreffende den oerheuvel (1922) |
Doctoral advisor | William Brede Kristensen |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Egyptology |
Sub-discipline | Middle Egyptian (language) |
Institutions | Leiden University |
Notable works | The Egyptian Coffin Texts (1935-1961) |
De Buck read theology in Leiden (1911–1916) with Pierre Daniel Chantepie de la Saussaye and William Brede Kristensen. He studied several Semitic languages (among them Arabic), and specialized in ancient Egyptian which he first read with Pieter Boeser. He then continued his studies in Egyptology in Göttingen and Berlin (1917–1921) with Adolf Erman and Kurt Sethe.
De Buck was ordained minister in the Dutch Reformed Church and served in the small town of Ursem (1921–1925).
On 6 July 1922 he received his doctorate in theology from Leiden University on a thesis titled De Egyptische voorstellingen betreffende den oerheuvel (“The Egyptian depictions concerning the primeval hill”), supervised by W.B. Kristensen. In 1924 he was approached by the Chicago University Oriental Institute concerning an international project for the publication of a complete text edition of the Egyptian Coffin Texts. He stepped down from his ministry in Ursem to work on the project, although he continued to occasionally preach in Leiden and its surroundings. De Buck worked on the text edition (together with Alan Gardiner) until his death, producing seven volumes. The first volume appeared in 1935, the last volume posthumously in 1961. This indispensable reference work is De Buck's greatest contribution to Egyptology. It consists of over 3,000 pages of handwritten hieroglyphic text. In 2005 the series was supplemented with a further volume composed by J.P. Allen.
De Buck was appointed lector at Leiden University in 1928, then professor extraordinarius in 1939 and full professor in 1949. From 1939 to 1955 De Buck and Assyriologist Franz Böhl were co-directors of the Netherlands Institute for the Near East in Leiden. In 1947 the International Association of Egyptologists was founded, aiming at publication of the Annual Egyptological Bibliography; De Buck was appointed chairman.
De Buck often gave lectures for the public society Ex Oriente Lux; he was a member of its advisory board and an editor of its annual Jaarbericht (JEOL). He participated in the “Serabit Expedition” (epigraphic expedition of Harvard University and Catholic University in the Sinai) in 1930. He was a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (1941)[1] and Teylers Eerste Genootschap (1951-1959).
De Buck married Anna Elisabeth Nordenberg (1894–1986; a Swedish national) on 30 June 1924. The couple had two daughters and a son.
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