Category:Women Authorship--1950s

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
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The page: Women Authorship--1950s, includes (in chronological order) scholarly and fictional works on Second Temple Judaism (Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Origins), authored by Women in the 1950s, or from 1950 to 1959.


Women Authorship (1950s) -- History of research -- Overview
Women Authorship (1950s) -- History of research -- Overview

Gladys Malvern, Anita Trueman Pickett, Grace Meyers Petitclerc and especially, Taylor Caldwell continued the tradition of female novelists in the field. But a new generation of female scholars was eager to emerge.

Argentine specialist of Romance and Hispanic Studies Emma Susana Speratti Piñero was one of the first women to contribute to Qumran Studies; in the 1950s she translated from the English into Spanish some of earliest works on the Dead Sea Scrolls by Edmund Wilson and Millar Burrows.

More directly involved in the scholarly study of the Scrolls was French specialist Annie Jaubert. Her pioneering studies on the Qumran calendar had a profound impact also on the interpretation of the Gospel chronology of the Last Supper.

Italian archaeologist Margherita Guarducci led the team of specialists who worked at the rediscovery of the ancient necropolis underneath the Vatican where the Tomb of Peter was located.









Women Authorship (1950s) -- Highlights
Women Authorship (1950s) -- Highlights


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