Lellia Cracco Ruggini Explained

Lellia Cracco Ruggini
Birth Place:Milan
Nationality:Italian
Education:
Occupation:Historian, professor

Lellia Cracco Ruggini (20 September 1931 – 27 June 2021) was an Italian historian of Late Antiquity and professor emerita of the University of Turin.[1] [2] Her particular interests were in economic and social history, the history of ideas, and modern and ancient historiography. She specialized in the period from the second to seventh centuries AD.

Early life and education

Ruggini was born in Milan on 20 September 1931. In 1954 she graduated from the University of Pavia with a degree in literature and was awarded a PhD in 1963 by the University of Turin.[3]

Career

From 1957 to 1968 Ruggini taught Greek and Roman history at the University of Pavia, becoming Libera Docente of Roman history and Latin epigraphy in 1963. She was Professor of Latin epigraphy at Pavia from 1965 to 1967.

She was director of the Institute of Ancient History at Turin University from 1968 to 1975, where she taught Roman history, Greek history and Latin epigraphy within the faculty of literature and philosophy. In 1989 she was elected as a member of the Academy of Europe.[4] In 1995 she became professor emerita at Turin University. She was elected a foreign correspondent of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres, France, in 2004, and advanced to become a foreign associate in 2010.

She held fellowships of the Italian Institute of Historical Study “Benedetto Croce” at Naples, the School for Advanced Studies at Paris, at the American Academy in Rome and twice made fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton New Jersey.

She was co-director of the New History Magazine, of the Italian History Magazine, and from 1962 to 1967 she was secretary of Athenaeum review.

She was a member of the Turin Academy of Science, the Lincean Academy, the National Society of Antiquaries of France (since 1991), the Institute of France, the European Academy at London, the Association for Late Antiquity at Paris and the Association for Late Antique Studies at Naples.

Prizes

Publications

She published over 300 journal articles and books.[6] Some of the most notable are:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lellia CRACCO RUGGINI. Accademia delle scienze, Torino. 28 March 2018.
  2. Web site: Lellia CRACCO RUGGINI. 28 June 2021. www.accademiadellescienze.it.
  3. Web site: CRACCO RUGGINI Lellia. 16 February 2011. fr. 28 March 2018. www.aibl.fr.
  4. Web site: Academy of Europe: Cracco Ruggini Lellia. www.ae-info.org. 28 March 2018.
  5. News: Lellia Cracco Ruggini. Institute for Advanced Study. 28 March 2018. en.
  6. Web site: Academy of Europe: Publications. www.ae-info.org. 28 March 2018.