Sarah C. "Sally" Humphreys was a classical scholar who unites the theories and methods of history and social anthropology in her work. She was Professor Emerita of History, Anthropology, and Greek at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Born 8 September 1934, she died in Oxford, UK on 27 February 2024.
Humphreys (née Hinchliffe) studied Greek language and literature, ancient history, and philosophy at Somerville College, Oxford, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in 1957: as per tradition, her BA was promoted to a Master of Arts degree in 1959.
After holding research fellowships at the University of Oxford, she became an academic librarian at the Warburg Institute in London in 1965. She collaborated with Arnaldo Momigliano in running the Ancient History Seminar, before she took up a lectureship at University College London in 1972. At the same time, Humphreys also set up a joint honours degree in Ancient History and Social Anthropology.[1] [2] In 1985, she became a professor at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and then at Central European University, Budapest.[3] Humphreys also held visiting professorships at several institutions including the Wissenschaftskolleg and Max Planck Institut fur Wissenschaftsgeschichte in Berlin, the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris, the Institute for History and Philosophy of Science in Tel Aviv, the Davis Center at Princeton University, The Internationales Forschungszentrum fur Kulturwissenschaften in Vienna, and University of Utrecht.
Humphreys applied theories and methodologies from anthropology to ancient history, as demonstrated in her 1978 collection of essays Anthropology and the Greeks.[4] The book has been described as, "the best overview of the ways in which scholars of Greek and Roman culture used and abused anthropological ideas."[5] In it, Humphreys explained that her inspiration was a technological question concerning the design and use of ancient Greek ships, which she approached by sailing around the Aegean in an open, keelless boat. She realized that while much remained the same as it was in the ancient world, (for example, the winds and sailing conditions,) much has changed, and that changes in economic institutions were more important than those in sailing technology.[6] The analysis of social and economic structures was central to her subsequent work. She has also used the lens of anthropology to explore ancient law, family structures and kinship. Her second collection of essays, The Family, Women and Death: Comparative Studies, was published in 1983.[7] Her third book, The Strangeness of Gods: Historical perspectives on the interpretation of Athenian religion, followed in 2004.[8] A conference she ran in 2008, Modernity's Classics,[9] examined how a range of cultures used their 'classics' to discuss the challenges of modernity; the proceedings were published in 2013. A two-volume collection of her extensive work on kinship was published in 2018.[10]
In 2017 her fellow-student at Somerville, Penny Minney, published Crab's Odyssey: Malta to Istanbul in an Open Boat, in which she described the initial sailing adventures that she and Humphreys experienced, covering 1500 miles in four years.[11] [12]