Access is granted in accordance with the
Protocols for the University Archives and Records Center.
PROVENANCE
Accessioned by the University Archives in April 1973.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Dr. Ephraim A. Speiser, chairman of the Department of Oriental Studies
at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School, was a noted archaeologist
and authority on the life and literature of the ancient and modern Near
East. Born in Skalat, Poland on January 24, 1902, Speiser received his
early education at the Imperial Gymnasium in Lemberg, Austria and graduated
from the College of Lemberg in 1918. Speiser continued his studies after
immigrating to the United States in 1920, receiving an M.A. from the
University of Pennsylvania in 1923 and a Ph.D. from Dropsie College
in 1924.
In 1926, the same year he became a U.S. citizen, Speiser won a Guggenheim
Fellowship to study the ancient Mitanni-Hurri tribe, a group of people
in Northern Mesopotamia who spoke the Hittite language. At the time,
he was one of only two people in the United States who understood this
language. While working in the Middle East in 1928, Speiser unearthed
the Tepe Gawra (or "Great Mound"), one of the world's earliest
cradles of civilization. He returned to Penn in 1928 to become assistant
professor of Semitics. In 1931, he became professor of Semitics, and
a few years later, chairman of the Department of Oriental Studies.
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During World War II, Speiser was chief of the Office of Strategic Services'
Near East Section of the Research and Analysis Branch. In 1962, he assisted
in writing a new Torah which became the first translation directly from
the traditional Hebrew text into modern English. He was also part of
a team of leading Catholic, Protestant and Jewish scholars who worked
on the "Anchor translation" of the Bible. Speiser's dedication
to scholarship in more than one discipline was recognized by the in
1964, when he was named a university professor, a title held by only
five members of Penn's faculty at the time.
During his career, Speiser received many honors and awards, including
the American Council of Learned Societies prize for outstanding scholarly
achievement and the Federation of Jewish Agencies' 1965 Community Award.
He died on June 15, 1965, several hours before accepting the latter
award, leaving behind his wife, Sue Gimbel Dannenbaum (granddaughter
of Charles Gimbel of the Gimbel Brothers) and their two children, Jean
and Joel.
SCOPE AND CONTENT
This collection consists of two notebooks of Ephraim A. Speiser during
his time as a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania in
1921. One, with a blank cover, largely relates to work which Speiser
did with Edward Chiera, Professor of Assyriology on Hourian texts recently
discovered at the time. The book contains various notes and translations,
which do not appear to be in any particular order. The second book,
titled "Aramaic Exam, E. Speiser", consists of notes on various
courses, some Aramaic and Akkadian, with Dr. James A. Montgomery. The
latter part of this book contains notes from a Sanskrit course with
Franklin Edgerton, titled "The Brahman and his Goat."
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