Margaret Cool Root Explained

Workplaces:University of Michigan
Sub Discipline:Achaemenid art
Thesis Title:The king and kingship in Achaemenid art
Thesis Year:1976

Margaret Cool Root is Professor of Near Eastern Art and Archaeology at the University of Michigan. She is an expert on the Achaemenid empire of ancient Persia and its interactions with Greece, and has published widely on Near Eastern material culture.

Career

Margaret Cool Root was educated at Bryn Mawr College, where she gained both her BA and PhD.[1] She joined the faculty at the University of Michigan's Department of the History of Art in 1978, where she is also a curator at the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology.

Her first major publication on the Achaemenid empire was the 1979 volume The King and Kingship in Achaemenid Art: Essays on the Creation of an Iconography of Empire (Acta Iranica 9);[2] this was a revised and expanded version of her doctoral thesis.[3]

In 1985, she was awarded a Fellowship of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.[4] She has also received support for her work from the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Iran Heritage Foundation.

She was part of the editorial committee for the Ars Orientalis Volume 42.[5]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cohen, Getzel M.. Breaking Ground: Pioneering Women Archaeologists. Joukowsky. Martha Sharp. University of Michigan Press. 2004. 0472031740. Ann Arbor. 567.
  2. Book: Martin, S. Rebecca. The Tiny and the Fragmented: Miniature, Broken, or Otherwise Incomplete Objects in the Ancient World. Langin-Hooper. Stephanie M.. Oxford University Press. 2018. 9780190614812. Oxford. xi.
  3. Book: Root, Margaret Cool.. The king and kingship in Achaemenid art: essays on the creation of an iconography of empire. 1979. E. J. Brill. 9789004058361. Acta Iranica ; 19 : 3. sér., Textes et mémoires ; v. 9. Leiden.
  4. Web site: John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Margaret Cool Root. en-US. 2019-04-26.
  5. Book: University of Michigan. Center for Chinese Studies . Ars orientalis; the arts of Islam and the East . Freer Gallery of Art . University of Michigan. Department of the History of Art . 1954 . [Washington, etc.], Freer Gallery of Art [etc.] . Smithsonian Libraries.