Elizabeth Lyding Will Explained

Elizabeth Lyding Will
Birth Date:1924
Death Place:Amherst, Massachusetts[1]
Nationality:American
Known For:Roman amphorae studies

Elizabeth Lyding Will (born 1924, died August 19, 2009, in Amherst, Massachusetts) was an American Classical archaeologist and a leading expert on Roman amphorae. She spent her long career teaching at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and Amherst College.[2]

Will earned her bachelor's degree at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, and undertook graduate study at Bryn Mawr College, earning an M.A. and a Ph.D. Her doctoral dissertation on "Homeric enjambment" was completed in 1949.[3]

Will is especially well known for her work on the typology of Roman amphorae. Her work on amphorae at the Latin colony of Cosa, completed jointly with Kathleen Warner Slane, appeared posthumously.[4] She carried out analysis of amphorae from a number of archaeological contexts in the Mediterranean, including the Athenian Agora, Delos and Cosa. In addition, she studied finds from the Roman shipwreck site at Grand Congloué.[5]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Obituary: Elizabeth L. Will, professor emeritus of classics and authority on amphoras. Office of News & Media Relations | UMass Amherst. 2019-07-24. 2019-07-24. https://web.archive.org/web/20190724142219/https://www.umass.edu/newsoffice/article/obituary-elizabeth-l-will-professor-emeritus-classics-and-authority-amphoras. dead.
  2. Elizabeth Lyding Will, 1924 - 2009. RAUH, NICHOLAS K.. 2010. American Journal of Archaeology. 114. 3. 547–548. 25684293. 10.3764/aja.114.3.547.
  3. Book: Benjamin Wynn Fortson. Studies in the prosody of Plautine Latin: a thesis. 1996. Harvard University.
  4. Book: Kathleen Slane. Elizabeth L Will. Cosa: The Roman and Greek Amphoras. 3 January 2019. University of Michigan Press. 978-0-472-13143-3.
  5. Book: Anna Marguerite McCann. The Roman Port and Fishery of Cosa: A Center of Ancient Trade. 14 March 2017. Princeton University Press. 978-1-4008-8668-5. 32–.