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Sarah Joanne Clackson (née Quinn) (11 December 1965 – 10 August 2003) was a British Coptologist; she was Britain's foremost Coptologist. Born in Leicester, she was educated at Loughborough High School and St John's College, Cambridge where she studied classics and Egyptology. She obtained a PhD from UCL in 1996; her PhD at University College London was completed in four years, resulting in her first major book, Coptic and Greek texts Relating to the Hermopolite Monastery of Apa Apollo (2000). At the same time, she was working as Project Officer for the Manichaean Documentation Centre based first at the Institute of Classical Studies, London, and then at Warwick University; The Dictionary of Manichaean Texts, volume i, Texts from the Roman Empire (1998), bears her name among its authors, as

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  • Sarah Clackson (de)
  • Sarah Clackson (en)
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  • Sarah Jane Clackson (* als Sarah Joanne Quinn 11. Dezember 1965 in Leicester; † 10. August 2003 in Cambridge) war eine britische Papyrologin und Koptologin. Clackson besuchte die Schule in Loughborough und lernte dort auch ihren späteren Ehemann kennen. An der Universität Cambridge studierte sie zunächst Klassische Philologie, danach Ägyptologie. Am University College London wurde sie 1996 bei mit der Arbeit Coptic documents relating to the monasteries of Apa Apollo at Bawit and Titkooh in the Hermopolite nome promoviert. 2003 verstarb sie im Alter von 37 Jahren an Krebs. Zu dieser Zeit war sie Lady Wallis Budge Research Fellow am Christ's College in Cambridge; 2004 sollte sie als Gastdozentin an die Universität Heidelberg gehen. Sie hinterließ ihren Ehemann James Clackson, den sie 1991 g (de)
  • Sarah Joanne Clackson (née Quinn) (11 December 1965 – 10 August 2003) was a British Coptologist; she was Britain's foremost Coptologist. Born in Leicester, she was educated at Loughborough High School and St John's College, Cambridge where she studied classics and Egyptology. She obtained a PhD from UCL in 1996; her PhD at University College London was completed in four years, resulting in her first major book, Coptic and Greek texts Relating to the Hermopolite Monastery of Apa Apollo (2000). At the same time, she was working as Project Officer for the Manichaean Documentation Centre based first at the Institute of Classical Studies, London, and then at Warwick University; The Dictionary of Manichaean Texts, volume i, Texts from the Roman Empire (1998), bears her name among its authors, as (en)
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  • Sarah Jane Clackson (* als Sarah Joanne Quinn 11. Dezember 1965 in Leicester; † 10. August 2003 in Cambridge) war eine britische Papyrologin und Koptologin. Clackson besuchte die Schule in Loughborough und lernte dort auch ihren späteren Ehemann kennen. An der Universität Cambridge studierte sie zunächst Klassische Philologie, danach Ägyptologie. Am University College London wurde sie 1996 bei mit der Arbeit Coptic documents relating to the monasteries of Apa Apollo at Bawit and Titkooh in the Hermopolite nome promoviert. 2003 verstarb sie im Alter von 37 Jahren an Krebs. Zu dieser Zeit war sie Lady Wallis Budge Research Fellow am Christ's College in Cambridge; 2004 sollte sie als Gastdozentin an die Universität Heidelberg gehen. Sie hinterließ ihren Ehemann James Clackson, den sie 1991 geheiratet hatte. Ihre private Bibliothek zur Koptologie hinterließ sie der Universität Warschau, ihre Unterlagen und Fotos erhielt das Griffith Institute der Universität Oxford. Im September 2004 wurde zu ihrem Gedenken eine Konferenz abgehalten. Auf dem in Cambridge, auf dem Clackson bestattet wurde, befindet sich eine Gedenktafel an sie. Zunächst arbeitete Clackson auf dem Gebiet der Ägyptologie, befasste sich dann aber vor allem mit der Koptischen Papyrologie. Zum zentralen Punkt ihres Wirkens wurde das Kloster Apa Apollo in . 2000 veröffentlichte sie eine Monografie mit griechischen und koptischen Texten zum Kloster. Ein weiterer Band vereinte 90 weitere koptische Texte dazu und machte sie in der Fachwelt bekannt. Durch ihre Studien konnte sie das Leben und das wirtschaftliche Leben im Kloster nachvollziehbarer machen. Zudem ordnete Clackson die Manuskripte unter anderem der Cambridge University Library. Sie arbeitete in fast allen bedeutenden koptischen Papyrussammlungen in Europa und Nordamerika. (de)
  • Sarah Joanne Clackson (née Quinn) (11 December 1965 – 10 August 2003) was a British Coptologist; she was Britain's foremost Coptologist. Born in Leicester, she was educated at Loughborough High School and St John's College, Cambridge where she studied classics and Egyptology. She obtained a PhD from UCL in 1996; her PhD at University College London was completed in four years, resulting in her first major book, Coptic and Greek texts Relating to the Hermopolite Monastery of Apa Apollo (2000). At the same time, she was working as Project Officer for the Manichaean Documentation Centre based first at the Institute of Classical Studies, London, and then at Warwick University; The Dictionary of Manichaean Texts, volume i, Texts from the Roman Empire (1998), bears her name among its authors, as does The Elephantine Papyri in English (1996). Our Father who writes: orders from the Monastery of Apollo at Bawit, was published in 2008. She held the Eugénie Strong Fellowship in Arts at Girton College (1996–98) and the Lady Wallis Budge Fellowship in Egyptology at Christ's College (from 1998). A fund in her name, Sarah (J.) Clackson Coptic Fund, enables scholars to access her papers, which are held in the Archive of the Griffith Institute, Oxford, and to further her work in Coptic and papyrology. She married fellow Old Loughburian and Cambridge academic James Clackson in 1991. She was diagnosed with cancer in 1998 and died peacefully at home at 3.00 p.m. on Sunday 10 August 2003. Her funeral took place at the West Chapel, Cambridge Crematorium, at 12.45 p.m. on Tuesday 19 August. Her memorial is at the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge. (en)
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