Ernest Will

Ernest Louis Georges Will (25 April 1913 – 24 September 1997) was a 20th-century French archaeologist and University professor, a member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres.[1]

Ernest Will
Born
Ernest Louis Georges Will

25 April 1913
Died24 September 1997(1997-09-24) (aged 84)
Paris
OccupationArchaeologist

Biography

After he finished his secondary studies at the Jean Sturm Gymnasium and passed a licence de lettres at the Strasbourg University, Ernest Will joined the École Normale Supérieure in 1933 and obtained an Aggregation classique in 1936. He was a student of the French School at Athens from 1937 to 1939 and led excavations on the sites of Thasos, Delos and Delphi. When he was mobilized at the approach of World War II, he was affected in Beirut to the staff of General Maxime Weygand.[2] After the Armistice of 22 June 1940, he returned to France where he was now a teacher at the lycée Thiers in Marseille from 1940 to 1943, an assistant to dean Charles Dugas at the Faculty of Arts of Lyon,[3] then he taught at the Collège-lycée Ampère in Lyon (1945).

On 1 October 1946, he became, with Jean Starcky, one of the first residents of the French Institute for Archaeology in Beirut, which has founded the same year by Henri Seyrig[4] and specialized in research on the Hellenized Middle East.[5]

On his return to France in 1951, he was an assistant in Greek language at the University of Lille (1951–1953). He defended a thèse d'État ès lettres in 1953, entitled Le relief cultuel gréco-romain : contribution à l'histoire de l'art de l'Empire romain,[6] and was recruited as a university professor in Lille (1953–1963). He was Director of Historic Antiquities of North-Picardie (1953–1968). He joined the Faculté des lettres de Paris as Greek language and literature professor (1963–1970) and then became a professor of art history and archeology at the Institute of Art and Archaeology of the Pantheon-Sorbonne University (1970-1973).

He returned to Beirut as Director of the Institut français d’archéologie du Proche-Orient (IFAPO) (1973-1980), and in this context, engaged into considerable activity during the Lebanese Civil War, to protect the interests of the Institute and "give it a new impetus," including by opening branches in Amman (Jordan) and Damascus (Syria)[7] Since 2003, the IFAPO is a component of the current Institut français du Proche-Orient (IFPO).

After his mission was accomplished, he resumed his position at the Institut d'art et d'archéologie then took his academic retirement in 1982.[8]

For 19 years he directed the academic journal Syria dedicated to archaeology published by the Institut Français du Proche-Orient (1978–1997).

He was appointed member of the Scientific Council of the École française d'Extrême-Orient in 1992.[9]

Sources

Works

  • 1949: La Tour funéraire de Palmyre, Paris, Paul Geuthner.
  • 1955: Le Relief cultuel gréco-romain : contribution à l'histoire de l'art de l'Empire romain, Paris, E. de Boccard.
  • 1992: Les Palmyréniens, Paris, Armand Colin.
  • 1995: De l'Euphrate au Rhin, somme de contributions, IFAPO.

References

  1. Liste des académiciens, site de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres.
  2. Malou Schneider, « Du Rhin à l'Euphrate. Archéologues alsaciens au Levant », Subartu XVII, 2006, (p. 1–6).
  3. Mélanges offerts à Ernest Will, Revue du Nord,LXVI, n°260, 1984
  4. Mathilde Gelin, L’Institut français d’archéologie de Beyrouth, 1946-1977, Syria, 2005/82, (p. 279–329) (p. 285).
  5. Maurice Sartre, « Ernest Will 1913-1997 », Encyclopaedia universalis
  6. Thèse d'État, notice Sudoc, read online
  7. Maurice Sartre, notice in the l'Encyclopaedia Universalis
  8. Fonds EW - Ernest Will. Archéologie du Proche-Orient hellénistique et romain Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, MAE René-Ginouvès, université Paris Ouest Nanterre.
  9. Arrêté du 2 juin 1992, JORF n°130, 5 June 1992 (p. 7483).
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