James Kinnier Wilson
James Kinnier Wilson (born London, 27 November 1921) is a British Assyriologist. He was Eric Yarrow Lecturer, from 1955 until 1989,[1] and is Emeritus Fellow, Wolfson College, Cambridge.[2]
Life
The youngest son of the neurologist Samuel Alexander Kinnier Wilson,[3] he has combined a skill in reconstructing Mesopotamian legends and epics with an enduring interest in the study of the organic and mental diseases of ancient Mesopotamia.
University career
- 1946: Admitted to Christ Church, Oxford
- 1949: BA (Oxon), in (Classical) Hebrew and Assyriology. 1952, MA
- 1950: Appointed Lecturer in Assyriology, Durham University
- 1951–52: Research year at The Oriental Institute, University of Chicago
- 1953–55: Lecturer and (one year) Asst. Prof., University College, Toronto
- 1955–89: Appointed Eric Yarrow Lecturer in Assyriology, University of Cambridge
- 1965–67: Chairman, Faculty of Oriental Studies, Cambridge
Publications
- The Nimrud Wine Lists: A study of men and administration at the Assyrian capital in the Eighth Century BC (The British School of Archaeology in Iraq, London, 1972)
- Indo-Sumerian: A new approach to the problems of the Indus Script (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1974)
- The Rebel Lands: An investigation into the Origins of Early Mesopotamian Mythology (Cambridge University Press, 1979)
- The Legend of Etana: A new edition (Aris and Phillips, Warminster, 1985)
- Studia Etanaica: new texts and discussions, Alter Orient und Altes Testament, Band 338 (Ugarit-Verlag, Münster, 2007)
- James Kinnier Wilson, ed. (2007). The Wisdom and the Beauty: A Selection of Short Passages from the Qur'an. Shepheard-Walwyn. ISBN 978-0-85683-247-5.
- Towards Novaluation: God's Work and Ours at the End of the Age (Janus Publishing Company, 2010)
Selected chapters and articles
- “An Introduction to Babylonian Psychiatry”, The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, Assyriological Studies, No. 16, Chicago, pp. 289–298, 1965
- “Organic diseases of Ancient Mesopotamia”, and “Mental diseases of Ancient Mesopotamia”, in D Brothwell and A T Sandison, eds., Diseases in Antiquity: a Survey of the Diseases, injuries and Surgery of Early Populations, (Charles C. Thomas, Springfield, Illinois), Chaps. 15 and 56, 1967
- “Medicine in the Land and the Times of the Old Testament”, in Studies-in the period of David and Solomon and other Essays, ed. Tomo Ishida (Yamakawa-Shuppansha, Tokyo), pp. 339–365, 1982
- “The ‘Seven Cities’ of the Indus Script: a Restatement”, South Asian Studies, 12, pp. 99–104, 1996
- “'On the Ud-shu-bala [Weather change] at Ur towards the End of the Third Millennium BC”, Iraq LXVII/2, pp. 47–60, 2005
- “On Stroke and Facial Palsy in Babylonian Texts” (with E. H. Reynolds), in Disease in Babylonia. ed. I.L. Finkel and M.J. Geller (Brill, Leiden), pp. 67–99, 2007
gollark: The most marginally useful use of them I've seen is a similar thing - L-systems for procedural generation.
gollark: Er, no, those aren't actually seriously used much.#
gollark: Turtle graphics? What?
gollark: I could never get graphing to work properly.
gollark: Sounds cool.
References
- http://www.ane.arch.cam.ac.uk/people/research.html%5B%5D
- http://www.wolfson.cam.ac.uk/fellows/emeritus/open/?i=3550%5B%5D
- Jellinek, E H (2004). "The Kinnier Wilson library in Edinburgh". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 75 (6): 933–935. doi:10.1136/jnnp.2003.029462. PMC 1739052.
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