The department was founded in 1894 by order of the Regents of the University of California as the Department of Semitic Languages with one faculty member. Now known as the department of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures, it has over 20 faculty members in multiple disciplines. While the focus of this page is the faculty of MELC and their accomplishments, in some cases it will make note of relevant Berkeley faculty and goings-on in other departments.
1890s: Beginnings of Semitics at Cal
*1899-1900: Excavations in the ancient Graeco-Roman city of Tebtunis in Egypt financed by UC benefactor Phoebe Apperson Hearst; over 20,000 objects and papyri—the largest papyrus collection in the US—are brought to the Bancroft Library where they are now managed by the Center for the Tebtunis Papyri. *1899-1905: The Hearst Expedition excavated cemeteries in the area of Qift in Egypt, likewise financed by Phoebe Hearst. The expedition brought back numerous objects, among them stelae and the Hearst Medical Papyrus now cared for in campus collections. |
Max L. Margolis (Prof. of Semitic Languages and Literatures, 1897-1905) |
1900-1920: Stability and first students
William Popper (Prof. of Semitic Languages, 1905-1945) |
*1911, Arthur Upham Pope (1881-1969), the foremost promoter of the field of "Persian Art" in the West, was hired at Cal as associate professor of Philosophy. He taught on philosophy and aesthetics until 1918. In 1914 he organized an exhibition of Phoebe Apperson Hearst's 'oriental' carpets at the University and in 1916 collaborated on a catalogue of her collection for an exhibition at San Francisco’s Palace of Fine Arts. |
1920s-1930s: Egyptology arrives at Cal
Henry Lutz (Prof. of Egyptology and Assyriology, 1921-1954) |
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1940s: Post-war years
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Walter Fischel (Prof. of Semitic Lang & Lit, 1945-1970) |
1950s: A modern NES begins to take shape
William Brinner (Prof. of Near Eastern Studies, 1956-1991) |
By the end of the decade, the department counts 5 full-time faculty members (up from 2 the previous decade) representing the areas of Semitics, Assyriology, Egyptology, Islamic & Jewish Studies, and South Asian languages. |
1960s: The department grows
*In 1965, Ira Lapidus is hired as professor of Islamic history in the History department. |
Guitty Azarpay (Prof. of Iranian Art, 1964-1994) Anne Kilmer (Prof. of Assyriology, 1963-2001) |
1970s
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