Omeka Title: PA-CU-B07-F002-079a-1925.jpg     
Omeka ID: 4443     
Transcription: Nov. 29th. 1925.Dear Dr. Gordon I hope to arrive in time for Xmas or at least for New Year in true Scotch style. I thank you heartily for the kind thought and the \"saying it\" with music. I am looking forward at the Victrola and the thirty records and the Arab tunes. I am not sure that Woolley quite relish the idea. He is not found of music. I saw in your letter of Nov - 2nd that you had at that date not yet received my letter and ms. mailed from Roma Oct. 18th. I have written again from Bagdad as soon as I was through. My crossing the desert over Tripoli and Palmyra had no special difficulty - In Beyrouth they were exhibiting a selling a photograph of some forty men killed and exposed under guard on one public place of Damascus but I was assured that all was quiet and we had no armed guard with us all the     
Media Title: Ur Notebook Scan -- 1925 - Box: 7 Folder: 2 - Page: 079a     
Page Number: 079a     
Project: CU     
Date: 1925     
Author: Leon Legrain     
Penn Archival Box Number: 7     
Penn Archival Folder Number: 2     
Crowdsource Tags: handwritten, Legrain     

People: Ur Notebook Scan -- 1925 - Box: 7 Folder: 2 - Page: 079a | Ur Notebook Scan -- 1925 - Box: 7 Folde Export: JSON - XML - CSV

People Full Name Biography
Leon Legrain Father Legrain was born in France, ordained as a priest there in 1904, and studied at the Catholic University of Lille and at the Collegium Appolinare in Rome. Assyriology professor at the Catholic Institute in Paris until WWI, he was then an interpreter in the war. He became curator of the Babylonian Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum in 1920 and retired in 1952. A specialist in cuneiform, he was the epigraphist at Ur during the 1924-25 and 1925-26 field seasons. He published widely on texts and engraved seals, both in his time before the Penn Museum and after. He published seals and sealings from Ur (Ur Excavations volume 10), some of the tablets (Ur Excavations Texts volume 3) and was slated to publish a volume on the figurines from the site. His research and even an unpublished catalogue for this volume are in archives at the Penn Museum and now available on this website. Even after his two years at the site of Ur, Legrain played an integral role in the excavations. Not only did he research, publish, and display artifacts in the Penn Museum, but he was also the Museum's representative in the division of objects from Ur conducted almost every year in London. Legrain's letters about this process are very interesting, often in a more personal tone than Woolley's. In fact, many of his colleagues declared that Legrain was particularly entertaining and jovial, if cynical. His photographs at Ur are some of the only images we have of daily life, with many pictures of local Iraqis.
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