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Larissa Bonfante - Joseph A. Lucchese Funeral Home
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Larissa Bonfante

Larissa Bonfante

Larissa Bonfante, archaeologist, longtime New York University classicist, and noted Etruscologist who threw new light on the stubbornly mysterious language of the Etruscans, died on August 23 in New York. Her family said the cause was lung cancer. She was 88.

The preeminent American scholar in the field of Etruscan studies, Bonfante’s many publications reflect the wide scope of her expertise, with topics ranging from the history of costume to the barbarian civilizations of pagan Europe. Colleagues were quick to recognize her as responsible for creating a scholarly community of Etruscan scholars in the United States and as a leading influence on a new generation of American scholars who gave the field a new vigor and prominence in the past 30 years.

Some of Bonfante’s own publications on the Etruscans broke new ground about that artistically evolved pre-Roman civilization of central Italy. The Etruscan Language, co-authored with her father, Giuliano Bonfante, a noted professor of linguistics at Princeton, broke some of the code of what had long been regarded as an undecipherable language. Bonfante also teased out the significance of archaeological discoveries such as the Piacenza Liver, a bronze template for soothsaying, which, she pointed out, provided a systematic nomenclature of Etruscan deities, and the Cerveteri Gold Medals, which duplicated citations in both Etruscan and Phoenician, serving as a kind of Rosetta Stone for some of the Etruscan alphabet.

Bonfante was the recipient of a Great Teacher award at NYU, and the Archaeological Institute of America”s Gold Medal for Distinguished Achievement. She was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2009. 

Born in Naples of Italian parents, she grew up in Princeton N.J., attended Radcliffe College and earned her B.A. from Barnard College; her M.A. from the University of Cincinnati; and her Ph.D. from Columbia University. She is survived by a daughter, Alexandra Bonfante-Warren; a son Sebastian Bonfante Raditsa; and a brother, Jordan Bonfante. A memorial will take place in the late Fall. In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the Calvary Hospital in New York. 

2 Comments

  • Laurel Sparks Posted August 29, 2019 10:11 am

    Larissa Bonfante was a great scholar and wonderful person. Besides receiving the Archaeological Institute of America’s Gold Medal, she also held our Norton Lectureship–two of the highest honors the AIA can bestow. Having worked with her regarding her lectures, I know how generous she was with her time, how dedicated she was to her field of research, and what a delightful individual she was. I will very much miss seeing her at conferences, bearing her armful of “Etruscan Times”!

  • Donald Sprague Posted August 29, 2019 1:09 pm

    Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers sends its condolences to Professor Bonfante’s family and is honored to have worked with her on The Plays of Hrotswitha of Gandersheim (Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, 1986) and of The Plays of Hrotswitha of Gandersheim: Bilingual Edition (Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, 2013), for which she served as translator. Her daughter, Alexandra Bonfante-Warren, worked with her on the first edition.

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