About Bendt Alster
Bendt Alster was a Sumerian scholar and expert in cuneiform.
Biographical details
Basic information
person Full name | Bendt Alster |
cake Date of birth | July 26, 1946 |
event_busy Date of death | April 30, 2012 |
Biographical mentions
Bendt Alster studied Assyriology at the University of Copenhagen from 1965 to 1972 and received the doctoral degree in 1975. He spent one year in Rome at the Biblical Institute (1968-69), and another (1970-71) at Harvard University studying with Thorkild Jacobsen. Alster was visiting scholar at the University Museum, Philadelphia, in 1973, 1988-89, 1992 and again in 1993-94, as well as visiting scholar at the British Expedition to Iraq, Baghdad in 1990, and visiting scholar at the Babylonian Collection, Yale University, 1992. Bendt Alster was external lecturer at the University of Copenhagen from 1978 until 2005.
Source: cdli.ox.ac.uk on 08/02/2020
CDLI:Wiki data help_outline
Core CDLI:Wiki data
Name | Alster, Bendt |
Dates (life) | 26 July 1946 - 30 April 2012 |
Specialization | Sumerology, Assyriology |
Top works
"Inanna Repenting: The Conclusion of Inanna’s Descent" | Cuneiform Texts From Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum. Part XLVIII | |
Journal article | Book | |
1996 | 1990 | |
Author | Author | |
More info | More info |
Authored works by Bendt Alster
Cuneiform Texts From Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum. Part XLVIII: Sumerian Literary Texts Book · Bendt Alster · 1990
Sorry, we don't quite have all the details about this work yet. list_alt Access options "Inanna Repenting: The Conclusion of Inanna’s Descent": Acta Sumerologica 18 (1996): 1-18. Journal article · Bendt Alster · 1996
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Role: Editor
Role: Translator
Role: Contributor
CDLI:Wiki data for Bendt Alster
Bendt Alster has a dedicated entry page on CDLI:Wiki with the name 'Alster, Bendt.' Included data from this source may provide the person's name, date of birth, date of death, major works, obituaries, and compiler remarks.
About the CDLI:Wiki
- CDLI:Wiki Est. 2007expand_lessThe CDLI:Wiki is an extension of the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative (CDLI) project. It provides useful information about cuneiform studies: lists of artifacts, scholar biographies, and a list of abbreviations related to Assyriology.
Record numbers
CDLI:Wiki ID | alster_bendt |
Cuneiformist profile
Name | Alster, Bendt |
Dates (life) | 26 July 1946 - 30 April 2012 |
Birthplace | Denmark |
Specialization | Sumerology, Assyriology |
Major works | Dumuzi's dream. Aspects of oral poetry in a Sumerian myth. Copenhagen: 1972; Proverbs of Ancient Sumer: The World's Earliest Proverb Collections. Bethesda, MD: 1997; Wisdom of Ancient Sumer. Bethesda, Md: 2005. |
Remarks | Bendt Alster studied Assyriology at the University of Copenhagen from 1965 to 1972 and received the doctoral degree in 1975. He spent one year in Rome at the Biblical Institute (1968-69), and another (1970-71) at Harvard University studying with Thorkild Jacobsen. Alster was visiting scholar at theUniversity Museum, Philadelphia, in 1973, 1988-89, 1992 and again in 1993-94, as well as visiting scholar at the British Expedition to Iraq, Baghdad in 1990, and visiting scholar at the BabylonianCollection, Yale University, 1992. Bendt Alster was external lecturer at the University of Copenhagen from 1978 until 2005. |
Obituaries | Bendt ranks among the most significant Sumerologists of the past halfcentury. His 1972 book, Dumuzi's Dream: Aspects of Oral Poetry in a SumerianMyth, remains a poignant example of the potential of using literarycriticism in combination with traditional philology to advance ourunderstanding of ancient Mesopotamian texts. Dumuzi's Dream, together withhis 1997 Proverbs of Ancient Sumer, and his 2005 Wisdom of Ancient Sumer,stand as the greatest testimonials to Bendt's scholarly achievement. Yet itwas another study, his 1992 article on the Early Dynastic proverbs (Archivfür Orientforschung 38, 1-51) that Bendt once mentioned to us, in his modestway, as his best work. |
Raw text
==== Alster, Bendt ====
{{ http://cdli.ucla.edu/wiki/lib/exe/fetch.php/1990alsterim.jpg?w=480&h=316}}
== Name ==
Alster, Bendt
== Dates ==
26 July 1946 - 30 April 2012
== Birthplace ==
Denmark
== Specialization ==
Sumerology, Assyriology
== Major works ==
Dumuzi's dream. Aspects of oral poetry in a Sumerian myth. Copenhagen: 1972; Proverbs of Ancient Sumer: The World's Earliest Proverb Collections. Bethesda, MD: 1997; Wisdom of Ancient Sumer. Bethesda, Md: 2005.
== Remarks ==
Bendt Alster studied Assyriology at the University of Copenhagen from 1965 to 1972 and received the doctoral degree in 1975. He spent one year in Rome at the Biblical Institute (1968-69), and another (1970-71) at Harvard University studying with Thorkild Jacobsen. Alster was visiting scholar at the
University Museum, Philadelphia, in 1973, 1988-89, 1992 and again in 1993-94, as well as visiting scholar at the British Expedition to Iraq, Baghdad in 1990, and visiting scholar at the Babylonian
Collection, Yale University, 1992. Bendt Alster was external lecturer at the University of Copenhagen from 1978 until 2005.
== Obituaries ==
Bendt ranks among the most significant Sumerologists of the past half
century. His 1972 book, Dumuzi's Dream: Aspects of Oral Poetry in a Sumerian
Myth, remains a poignant example of the potential of using literary
criticism in combination with traditional philology to advance our
understanding of ancient Mesopotamian texts. Dumuzi's Dream, together with
his 1997 Proverbs of Ancient Sumer, and his 2005 Wisdom of Ancient Sumer,
stand as the greatest testimonials to Bendt's scholarly achievement. Yet it
was another study, his 1992 article on the Early Dynastic proverbs (Archiv
für Orientforschung 38, 1-51) that Bendt once mentioned to us, in his modest
way, as his best work.
Bendt was a generous teacher, and his interests were wide-ranging. He was
well-read in other disciplines, from biblical and classical studies to
literary studies and the history of religions. He never approached the study
of Sumerian literature as an isolated endeavour, but regarded it as part of
the general study of literature and always made reference to a wide array of
works from the classical tradition to the New Testament parables, over
Quranic literature to modern day classics from Russia, England and Denmark
when teaching his students. As one, small testimony to his inspiring
intellectual curiosity, he took up Arabic again last year - which he had not
used much since his classes with Professor Frede Løkkegaard in his youth.
Bendt was a subtle translator. He always insisted that we should attempt to
render all Sumerian texts in modern languages, once mentioning in jest that
Sumerian was not yet part of the standard curriculum in high school.
Only among his closer friends and colleagues was it known that Bendt also
was an accomplished photographer, with his own dark room, and that he played
a very reputable viola.
Bendt died Monday, April 30, 2012, following complications from surgery on a
fractured leg. He is survived by his wife, Norma.
A summary of the works of Bendt Alster is being prepared for CDLI's
Wikipedia pages.
Bendt will be greatly missed.
Laura Feldt
&
Jacob L. Dahl
== Obituary in Danish ==
Mindeord for Bendt Alster
Bendt Alster blev født d.26. juli 1946. Bendt var blandt de få, som forsker i verdens ældste litteratur fra oldtidens Mesopotamien. Særligt specialiserede han sig i litteratur affattet på sumerisk og han var en af de mest fremragende sumerologer verden har set i de sidste 50 år. I sit arbejde kombinerede han med succes litteraturvidenskabelige tilgange med traditionel filologi og viste, hvor værdifuldt dette kan være for studiet af oldtidens litteratur fra myter, over ordsprog til visdomstekster, som det fx ses i hans værker (1972, Dumuzi's Dream: Aspects of Oral Poetry in a Sumerian Myth (1972); Proverbs of Ancient Sumer (1997) og Wisdom of Ancient Sumer (2005). På dansk redigerede han bl.a. Gads religionshistoriske tekster (1984, sammen med Christiand Lindtner) og Dagligliv blandt guder og mennesker (1986, sammen med Paul John Frandsen). Bendt var også en meget generøs lærer for sine studerende, med blik for livets og verdens mange facetter. Han var selv en omhyggelig oversætter af sumerisk litteratur, og insisterede altid på, at vi skulle forsøge at gengive sumeriske tekster levende på de moderne sprog, eftersom ”sumerisk endnu ikke er på skoleskemaet i gymnasiet” – og som altid blev pointen leveret med humor. Ydermere var han belæst i flere discipliner, fra bibelstudier og oldtidskundskab til litteraturvidenskab og religionshistorie. Han så aldrig studiet af sumerisk litteratur som en isoleret og støvet disciplin, men anså det for at være en del af det generelle studium af litteratur, ligesom han altid henviste til en bred palet af værker fra den klassiske tradition til de nytestamentlige lignelser, over Koranen og til moderne klassikere, når han underviste. Hans interesser var vidtfavnende, og et lille vidnesbyrd om hans inspirerende intellektuelle nysgerrighed er at han sidste år genoptog studiet af arabisk med stor fornøjelse – et sprog han ikke havde beskæftiget sig med siden han tog timer hos professor Løkkegaard i sin ungdom. Ved siden af sine akademiske meritter var Bendt en dygtig fotograf, han spillede glimrende bratsch, og med sine mange kære minder fra et studieophold i Italien holdt han af sine cappucinoer, ligesom hans og Normas somre i Rørvig var en stor glæde for ham. Bendt døde mandag d. 30. april 2012 efter komplikationer i forbindelse med operationer på lårbenet. Han var en sjældent dygtig sumerolog, en vidtfavnende humanist, og en god ven med et glimt i øjet. Han vil blive savnet.
Jacob L. Dahl og Laura Feldt
== Varia ==
== Bibliography ==
[[http://cdli.ucla.edu/pubs/cdln/php/bib/whoswho.php?author=Alster|Publications of Bendt Alster]]
Record notes
About these data
Retrieval date | Apr. 16, 2020 |
Copyright | CDLI:Wiki @ UCLA |
Bibliography
Alster, Bendt, and Markham J. Geller. Cuneiform Texts From Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum. Part XLVIII: Sumerian Literary Texts. Vol. 58. London, England: The Trustees of the British Museum, 1990.
Alster, Bendt, trans. "Inanna's Descent, Ending." In "Inanna Repenting: The Conclusion of Inanna’s Descent," 13-14, Acta Sumerologica 18 (1996): 1-18.
Alster, Bendt. "Inanna Repenting: The Conclusion of Inanna’s Descent." Acta Sumerologica 18 (1996): 1-18.