Leïla Ladjimi-Sebaï Explained

Leïla Ladjimi-Sebaï is a historian, archaeologist and epigrapher, writer and poet from Tunisia. She is a specialist in the history of Roman-era women in North Africa and the history of Carthage.[1]

Career

Leïla Ladjimi Sebaï has been the Director of Research, National Heritage Institute of Tunisia since 2009, and the President of the Association 'Les amis de Carthage' since 2012.[2] [3] Since its inauguration in 2014, she has been a member of the Board of Directors of MUCEM, a Mediterranean Museum at Marseille. From 2002 to 2010 she was President of ICOM (Tunisia), and from 2002 to 2005 was a member of the renovation commission at Carthage Museum, where she spent the majority of her career, and is principally responsible for its large collection of Latin epigraphy. She is a writer and poet, publishing a first collection of poetry, Chams, in 1991, for which she was awarded the “Grand Prix Tahar Haddad de la Nouvelle” in Tunis.

Education

Leïla Ladjimi Sebaï trained in classical dance and was a resident student at the Bolshoi Theater School in Moscow (1965-1967).[4] Her thesis on African women in the Roman era from epigraphic sources (La femme en Afrique à l'époque romaine: À partir de la documentation épigraphique) received an award in 1977 from the University of Provence.[5]

Awards and prizes

Leïla Ladjimi Sebaï was awarded the Serge Lancel Prize from the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres (Institut de France, Paris, 2005), for her study on Carthage.[6] In October 2010 she was awarded the rank of Officier in the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres[7]

Selected works

References

  1. Web site: histoire. 2021-03-23. www.cartaginoiseries.org.
  2. Web site: Ladjimi Sebaï, Leïla - Persée. 2021-03-23. www.persee.fr.
  3. Web site: IDRef.
  4. Web site: Arab Women Writers: A Critical Reference Guide, 1873-1999 - PDF Free Download. 2021-03-23. epdf.pub. en.
  5. Book: LADJIMI SEBAI. L. La femme en Afrique à l'époque romaine (à partir de la documentation épigraphique. EUZENNAT. M.. 1977.
  6. News: Lettre d'information n°56. ACADÉMIE DES INSCRIPTIONS ET BELLES-LETTRES.
  7. News: MUCEM. 36.