Louis Vico Žabkar
Louis Vico Žabkar (7 December 1914 – 15 September 1994)[1] was an American Egyptologist who published a number of academic works and who participated in the 1960s the UNESCO campaign to salvage the monuments threatened by the building of the Aswan Dam.
Žabkar was born on the Dalmatia island of Lastovo, which was then part of Italy. He was born to a Croatian father, Louis Franz Žabkar, and Italian mother, Maria Carminatti. He immigrated to the United States in 1948.[2] He received his Ph.D. in 1958 from the University of Chicago. After teaching in the history department of Loyola University Chicago he became Professor of Egyptology at Brandeis University where he worked until his retirement in 1984. He was field Director of the Oriental Institute Expedition to Semna South which excavated a Middle Kingdom Fortress and a large Meroitic cemetery. His interests covered Egyptian religion, Ptolemaic hieroglyphs and Nubiology.[3] His 1968 book on the concept of the ba in Ancient Egypt was the first in depth study of the subject.[4]
Žabkar died in 1994 in Rockport, Massachusetts.[1]
Select bibliography
- Ausgrabungen von Khor-Dehmit bis Bet el-Wali" (1967, contributor)
- A Study of the Ba Concept in Ancient Egyptian Texts (1968)
- Studies in Honor of John A. Wilson (1969, contributor)
- Apedemak: Lion God of Meroe: A Study in Egyptian-Meroitic Syncretism (1975)
- A Preliminary Report on the 1966-68 Excavations of the University of Chicago Oriental Institute Expedition to Sudanese Nubia JNES XIX (1982)
- Hymns to Isis in her temple at Philae (1988)
Notes
- 1 2 Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014. Social Security Administration.
- ↑ Illinois, Federal Naturalization Records, 1856-1991 for Louis Vico Zabkar
- ↑ "Louis Zabkar", Leonard H. Lesko, University of Chicago Ancient Near East Digest V2 #12, 21 September 1994, retrieved 28 July 2009
- ↑ "A Study of the Ba Concept in Ancient Egyptian Texts", Louis Vico Zabkar, University of Chicago Press, 1968