Louis-Joseph Delaporte

Louis-Joseph Delaporte, often known as Louis Delaporte (22 October 1874 - February 1944) was a French archaeologist and Hittitologist.[1]

Louis Delaporte was born in Saint-Hilaire-du-Harcouët. He died in Wołów prison in Silesia in February 1944.[1]

Works

  • Mesopotamia : the Babylonian and Assyrian civilization. Translated by V. Gordon Childe. 1925.
gollark: Since you can do more computation per unit energy at lower temperatures, and as the universe expands and loses usable energy it cools, I think some physicist worked out that you could manage to fit in an infinite amount of computing over infinite time somehow.
gollark: That's poorly defined.
gollark: Well, if you get immortal enough, you might be around then.
gollark: The entropy issue is, as far as I know, entirely intractable with current physics knowledge.
gollark: Hardly. By then humans will either be spread out enough to not care or dead.

References

  1. René Dussaud, Nécrologie: Louis Delaporte, Syria, Vol. 24 (1944), p.287-9


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.