By June 15, 2008 Read More →

Backward Glance: The Ur-Archaeologist, Edward M. Luby, Biblical Archaeology Review (23:2), Mar/Apr 1997.

Leonard Woolley

Sir Leonard Woolley

Sir Leonard Woolley, renowned as the excavator of “Ur of the Chaldees,” was no stranger to publicity. Through best-selling books, popular magazine articles and extensive newspaper interviews, Woolley painstakingly translated the results of his Near Eastern archaeological investigations into a language accessible to the public, winning himself legions of friends and followers—among them, Agatha Christie, T.E. Lawrence, Freya Stark, Gertrude Bell, Winston Churchill and even England’s Queen Mary.

Born in London in 1880 to a strict clerical family fallen on hard times, Woolley spent much of his youth focused on school. He won a scholarship to Oxford in 1899, where he studied theology with the clergyman William Archibald Spooner—whose nervous manner of speech gave rise to the term “spoonerism,” a tendency to transpose the initial consonants of words. It was Spooner who advised Woolley to give up the notion of becoming a schoolteacher and to pursue a career in archaeology. From 1905 to 1908, Woolley worked for Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum, where he came to value artifacts for bringing what he called the “dead-and-gone” back to life. Thereafter, he worked almost exclusively for museums.

Drawn further and further into the world of antiquity, Woolley finally took to the field.

Read the rest of Backward Glance: The Ur-Archaeologist in the online Biblical Archaeology Society Library.

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