Zsófia Torma
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Zsófia Torma (1840 – November 14, 1899) Hungarian archaeologist, anthropologist and paleontologist.
Torma was born in Csicsókeresztúr, Bihar county. She was mostly self-educated. The symbols and scripts on clay objects she found during an excavation in Hunyad county were an archaeological sensation. She also found artifacts of the 4500-year old Tordos culture; the writing on these artifacts bears some resemblance with the Old Hungarian script.
Her most famous work, the Ethnographische Analogien was published in Jena in 1894.
Torma had an important role in the founding of the Museum of Kolozsvár, to which she left her archaeological collection in her will. She was the first female to become a honorary doctor in the University of Kolozsvár (on May 24, 1899). She died in Szászváros in 1899.