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Obituaries

Obituary: Professor Miriam Griffin

Leading classicist who debunked teh view of Nero as an autocratic bully

October 11, 2018 08:13
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By

Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

2 min read

One of Oxford University’s most eminent tutors in ancient history and throughout her life a champion of female classicists, Professor Miriam Griffin (née Dressler), has died in her 82nd year.

A spirited New Yorker with a sharp and unforgiving eye for detail, Griffin fell easily into the world of Oxford scholarship. She was in her time regarded as one of the world’s leading authorities on the history of Jews and Christians in the Roman Empire (which she had been responsible for introducing into Oxford’s ancient history curriculum), but had built her reputation on a ground-breaking study, published in 1976, of the Roman philosopher and politician Seneca. Eight years later, she produced a masterly biography of the emperor Nero (Seneca’s pupil), expertly challenging the view that he was nothing but a bully and an autocrat, and pointing instead to his patronage of the arts and the theatre.

Regularly consulted by the media on everything Roman, for some years she edited The Classical Quarterly and in 2013 produced a superb study of Seneca on Society, an absorbing analysis of Seneca’s De Beneficiis, which dealt with the ethics of giving gifts.

But her academic career was grounded in her work and popularity as a caring tutor; among her former pupils can now be numbered leading authorities on the classical world who once sat at her feet; they include Tessa Rajek, Professor Emerita at the University of Reading, and Hannah Cotton, Shalom Horowitz Professor of Classics at the Hebrew University Jerusalem.