Norman Golb Explained

Norman Golb (15 January 1928[1] – 29 December 2020) was a scholar of Jewish history and the Ludwig Rosenberger Professor in Jewish History and Civilization at the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.

Life

Golb was born in Chicago, Illinois, United States, on 15 January 1928 to Joseph and Rose Golb, child immigrants from Ukraine.[2]

Golb studied at Wright Junior College in Chicago, now Wilbur Wright College, and then at Roosevelt College (now Roosevelt University).[3] He earned his PhD from Johns Hopkins University in 1954. While a student he held fellowships to undertake studies at Dropsie College in Philadelphia and another that ended up with him spending from 1955-1957 studying at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.[4]

He joined the faculty of the Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati in 1958 before settling at the University of Chicago, where he worked from 1963. Golb has also been a visiting scholar at the University of Wisconsin (1957–58), Harvard University (1966), and Tel Aviv University (1969–70).

Golb was a key proponent of the viewpoint that the Dead Sea Scrolls found in Qumran were not the product of the Essenes, but rather of many different Jewish sects and communities of ancient Israel, which he presents in his book Who Wrote The Dead Sea Scrolls?: The Search For The Secret Of Qumran. In the 1990s, Golb was an advocate for the freeing of the Scrolls for general scholarly studies.

Golb was the discoverer, in 1962, of the Kievan Letter, the earliest document attesting to Jewish habitation of Kyiv. He also identified Obadiah the Proselyte as the author of the oldest known manuscript of Hebrew music (12th century), the earliest extant legal record of the Jews of Sicily, a new document dealing with the First Crusade and new manuscript materials relating to the Jews of Rouen. Finally, he recovered a genizah document describing a European convert to Judaism (11th century) and an original manuscript of the Khazars.

Golb died in Chicago on 29 December 2020 aged 92.[2]

Selected bibliography

Resources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Reports of the President and of the Treasurer . 1963 . John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation . 132 .
  2. Web site: Berger . Joseph . Norman Golb, Dead Sea Scrolls Contrarian, Is Dead at 92 . The New York Times . 16 February 2021 . 15 February 2021.
  3. Wechsler, M. G., In Memoriam: Norman Golb, 15.I.1928-29.XII.2020, published in Mediterranea. International Journal on the Transfer of Knowledge, 31 March 2021, accessed 16 May 2023
  4. Web site: Norman Golb . The University of Chicago . 16 February 2021.