Ludo Rocher

Ludo Rocher is an eminent Sanskrit scholar, and the W. Norman Brown Professor Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania.[1] Prof. Rocher was born in Belgium on 25 April 1926 (U.S. citizen, 1972), and he earned his J.D. and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Ghent. He taught Sanskrit and comparative philology at the University of Brussels from 1956 to 1966.[2] Dr. Rocher directed the Center for Study of South and Southeast Asia at the University of Brussels from 1961-67.[3] Upon the invitation of Prof. W. Norman Brown, Prof. Rocher then moved to Philadelphia, where he was appointed as a Professor of Sanskrit at the University of Pennsylvania. From 1966 to 2002, with interruptions, he was the Chair of the Department of Oriental Studies (renamed Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies in 1991).[4] A past president of the American Oriental Society,[5] Dr. Rocher was elected a Member of the American Philosophical Society and of the Royal Academy of Overseas Sciences (Belgium), and a Fellow of the Asiatic Society (Calcutta) where he has frequently conducted research.[6] He has authored nearly twenty books and innumerable articles on Sanskrit legal and other branches of literature. His notable students include Prof. Rosane D. Rocher (University of Pennsylvania),[7] Prof. Robert P. Goldman (University of California, Berkeley),[8] Prof. Richard G. Salomon (University of Washington),[9] Prof. J. Patrick Olivelle (University of Texas),[10] Dr. Richard W. Lariviere (President, The Field Museum, Chicago),[11] Prof. Mitchell G. Weiss (University of Basel),[12] Prof. Frederick M. Smith (University of Iowa),[13] Prof. Xinru Liu,[14] and Signe M. Cohen (University of Missouri).[15] He lives in Philadelphia with his wife Rosane Rocher, Professor Emerita of the Department of South Asia Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.


Select bibliography

FESTSCHRIFT: Festschrift for Professor Ludo Rocher (editors Richard W. Lariviere and Richard Salomon), (Madras : Adyar Library and Research Centre, The Theosophical Society, 1987).

References