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'''Walter Ewing Crum''' (22 July 1865{{spaced ndash}}20 April 1944<ref group="n">So stated in W. H. Worrell, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/2855299 Review of ''Coptic Studies in Honor of Walter Ewing Crum''], ''[[Speculum (journal)|Speculum]]'' 27.1, January 1952, pp.&nbsp;88&ndash;94, p.&nbsp;88. However, Gerald Bonner, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/4422857 "The Crum Papers"], ''The British Museum Quarterly'' 28.3/4, Autumn 1964, pp.&nbsp;59&ndash;67, p.&nbsp;59, gives his date of death as 18 May 1941.</ref>) was a Scottish [[Coptology|coptologist]], or scholar in Coptic language and literature. In 1939 he completed ''A Coptic Dictionary,'' a dictionary of translations from [[Coptic language|Coptic]] to English.
'''Walter Ewing Crum''' (22 July 1865{{spaced ndash}}20 April 1944<ref group="n">So stated in W. H. Worrell, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/2855299 Review of ''Coptic Studies in Honor of Walter Ewing Crum''], ''[[Speculum (journal)|Speculum]]'' 27.1, January 1952, pp.&nbsp;88&ndash;94, p.&nbsp;88. However, Gerald Bonner, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/4422857 "The Crum Papers"], ''The British Museum Quarterly'' 28.3/4, Autumn 1964, pp.&nbsp;59&ndash;67, p.&nbsp;59, gives his date of death as 18 May 1941.</ref>) was a Scottish [[Coptology|coptologist]], or scholar in Coptic language and literature. In 1939 he completed ''A Coptic Dictionary,'' a dictionary of translations from [[Coptic language|Coptic]] to English.


Crum was the eldest son of Alexander Crum of Thornlebank, [[Glasgow]]. He attended [[Eton College|Eton]] and graduated from [[Balliol College, Oxford]], in 1888, after which he continued his studies of [[Egyptology]] in Paris and in Berlin with [[Adolf Erman]], who remained a lifelong friend.<ref name=JEA>H. I. Bell, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/3855184 "Walter Ewing Crum"], ''The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology'' 30, December 1944, pp.&nbsp;65&ndash;66.</ref>
Crum was the eldest son of Alexander Crum of [[Thornliebank]], [[Glasgow]]. He attended [[Eton College|Eton]] and graduated from [[Balliol College, Oxford]], in 1888, after which he continued his studies of [[Egyptology]] in Paris and in Berlin with [[Adolf Erman]], who remained a lifelong friend.<ref name=JEA>H. I. Bell, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/3855184 "Walter Ewing Crum"], ''The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology'' 30, December 1944, pp.&nbsp;65&ndash;66.</ref>


Crum spent much of his career cataloguing various Coptic materials, including the manuscript holdings of the [[John Rylands Library]] and the [[British Museum]].<ref>[http://www.gorgiaspress.com/bookshop/pc-56142-100-crum-w-e-coptic-monuments.aspx "''Coptic Monuments'' By W. E. Crum (Kiraz Historical Catalogues Archive 6)"], Gorgias Press, 2005, retrieved 26 June 2014.</ref> The Coptic dictionary is his most prominent publication, and he wrote several additional books and many articles.<ref name=JEA/>
Crum spent much of his career cataloguing various Coptic materials, including the manuscript holdings of the [[John Rylands Library]] and the [[British Museum]].<ref>[http://www.gorgiaspress.com/bookshop/pc-56142-100-crum-w-e-coptic-monuments.aspx "''Coptic Monuments'' By W. E. Crum (Kiraz Historical Catalogues Archive 6)"], Gorgias Press, 2005, retrieved 26 June 2014.</ref> The Coptic dictionary is his most prominent publication, and he wrote several additional books and many articles.<ref name=JEA/>

Revision as of 20:13, 18 January 2017

Walter Ewing Crum (22 July 1865 – 20 April 1944[n 1]) was a Scottish coptologist, or scholar in Coptic language and literature. In 1939 he completed A Coptic Dictionary, a dictionary of translations from Coptic to English.

Crum was the eldest son of Alexander Crum of Thornliebank, Glasgow. He attended Eton and graduated from Balliol College, Oxford, in 1888, after which he continued his studies of Egyptology in Paris and in Berlin with Adolf Erman, who remained a lifelong friend.[1]

Crum spent much of his career cataloguing various Coptic materials, including the manuscript holdings of the John Rylands Library and the British Museum.[2] The Coptic dictionary is his most prominent publication, and he wrote several additional books and many articles.[1]

He received an honorary doctorate from the University of Berlin and an honorary D.Litt. from Oxford University.[1] He was a Fellow of the British Academy and was elected a Foreign Member of the American Philosophical Society shortly before his death.[1] A festschrift, Coptic Studies in Honor of Walter Ewing Crum, was published in 1950 as a special issue of the Bulletin of the Byzantine Institute of America.[3][4]

Works

Notes

  1. ^ So stated in W. H. Worrell, Review of Coptic Studies in Honor of Walter Ewing Crum, Speculum 27.1, January 1952, pp. 88–94, p. 88. However, Gerald Bonner, "The Crum Papers", The British Museum Quarterly 28.3/4, Autumn 1964, pp. 59–67, p. 59, gives his date of death as 18 May 1941.

References

  1. ^ a b c d H. I. Bell, "Walter Ewing Crum", The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 30, December 1944, pp. 65–66.
  2. ^ "Coptic Monuments By W. E. Crum (Kiraz Historical Catalogues Archive 6)", Gorgias Press, 2005, retrieved 26 June 2014.
  3. ^ Coptic Studies in Honor of Walter Ewing Crum, Bulletin of the Byzantine Institute 2 (1950), OCLC 715404377
  4. ^ W. H. Worrell, Review of Coptic Studies in Honor of Walter Ewing Crum, Speculum 27.1, January 1952, pp. 88–94.

Sources