Leonard H. Lesko
Leonard H. Lesko (born 1938) was the Chairman of the Department of Egyptology at Brown University and held the Charles Edwin Wilbour Professorship. In 1961, he received a B.A. in Classics from Loyola University Chicago, and his masters in 1964. In 1969, he received a Ph.D. in "Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations-Egyptology" at the University of Chicago. Prior to joining the Brown faculty in 1982, he held various teaching positions at University of California-Berkeley.
Lesko is an expert in Egyptian languages including Old, Middle, and Late Egyptian, Demotic, and Coptic. He has also studied the Coffin Texts, The Book of the Dead and Deir el-Medina. Along with his wife, Barbara Lesko, he edited 'A Dictionary of Late Egyptian.'
Publications
- King Tut's Wine Cellar (1977))[1]
- Egyptological Studies in Honor of Richard A. Parker: Presented on the Occasion of His 78th Birthday (editor) (1986)[2]
- A Dictionary of Late Egyptian (1990)[3]
- The ancient Egyptian Book of two ways published 1977[4]
- Ancient Egyptian and Mediterranean Studies in Memory of William A. Ward[5]
- Exodus: The Egyptian Evidence-by Brown University, Ernest S. Frerichs, William G. Dever, Leonard H. Lesko[6]
- Index of the Spells on Egyptian Middle Kingdom Coffins and Related Documents[7]
- Joseph Lindon Smith: Paintings from Egypt - An Exhibition, Brown University, October 8-November 21, 1998 Barbara S. Lesko, Diana W. Larkin, Joseph Lindon Smith, Brown University Dept. of Egyptology[8]
- Pharaoh's Workers: The Villagers of Deir el Medina[9]
- Religion in Ancient Egypt : Gods, Myths, and Personal Practice[10]
- Through A Glass Darkly: Magic, Dreams and Phrophecy in Ancient Egypt[11]
See also
References
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