Miguel Civil, Prof. Emeritus at the OI and renowned Sumerology scholar, 1926 to 2019

January 16, 2019

Miguel Civil, wearing glasses and a suit, sifts through pages on a desk.

Photo by Gonzalo Rubio

Miguel Civil, Professor Emeritus at the Oriental Institute and a "towering figure in ancient studies" who shaped modern, post-WWII studies of Sumerology, passed away January 13, 2019. He was 92. 

"Miguel’s academic contributions are simply monumental — more than any other scholar he shaped the modern, post WW II, study of Sumerology. Our understanding of Sumerian writing, grammar, lexicography, literature, agriculture, and socio-economic institutions all bear his deep imprint. Born outside of Barcelona in 1926 and trained in Paris, Miguel came to the US in 1958 to take the position of Associate Researcher under Samuel Noah Kramer at the University of Pennsylvania. He joined the faculty of the University of Chicago in 1964. After retiring in 2001, Miguel remained the field’s leading light, publishing two books (The Early Dynastic Practical Vocabulary A (Archaic HAR-ra A) (Rome, 2008) and The Lexical texts in the Schøyen Collection (Bethesda, MD, 2010) and numerous seminal articles during this time. His 2013 article, “REMARKS ON AD-GI4 (A.K.A. ‘ARCHAIC WORD LIST C’ OR ‘TRIBUTE’),” published in the Journal of Cuneiform Studies, is a work of stunning insight and erudition that at once exemplified his brilliance and showed Miguel to still be at the pinnacle of his intellectual powers as he approached ninety. He was a mentor, teacher, and friend to two generations of Sumerologists and Assyriologists. And those who knew Miguel will also remember his kindness and generosity, his great stories and searing wit which took on a special nuance in his distinctive gravel voice.  We are not likely to see his kind again. He will be sorely missed."

-Christopher Woods, John A. Wilson Professor of Sumerian in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, and Director of the Oriental Institute.

A memorial will be held at 4 p.m. March 18 at Bond Chapel.

Read more about Prof. Civil via UChicago News and the Chicago Tribune.