Peter Lienhardt

Peter Lienhardt
D.Phil.
Born (1928-03-12)12 March 1928
Bradford, West Riding of Yorkshire, United Kingdom
Died 17 May 1986(1986-05-17) (aged 58)
Nationality British
Academic background
Thesis title The Shaikhdoms of Eastern Arabia
Thesis year 1957
Academic work
Discipline Social anthropologist
Sub discipline Arab societies

Peter Lienhardt (1928–1986) was a British social anthropologist.

Life

Lienhardt was born in Bradford on 12 March 1928. He was educated at Batley Grammar School and, like his brother Godfrey Lienhardt, at Downing College, Cambridge, where he studied Arabic and Persian. After military service in the Royal Air Force he undertook post-graduate studies in social anthropology at Lincoln College, Oxford, earning a doctorate in 1957 with a thesis on "The Shaikhdoms of Eastern Arabia".[1]

In the mid 1950s he carried out fieldwork in the Gulf States for his doctorate, and as a senior research fellow at the East African Institute for Social Research at Makerere College, Uganda, he carried out fieldwork in Zanzibar in the late 1950s. He carried out further fieldwork in Iran in the mid 1960s.

Lienhardt was appointed to a faculty lectureship in Middle Eastern sociology at the Institute of Social Anthropology, Oxford. He died on 17 March 1986.[2]

In 1987 the British Society for Middle Eastern Studies published a volume in his honour, The Diversity of the Muslim Community: Anthropological Essays in Memory of Peter Lienhardt, edited by Ahmed Al-Shahi.

Work

References

  1. Ahmed Al-Shahi, "Obituary: Dr Peter Lienhardt, 1928-1986", Bulletin (British Society for Middle Eastern Studies), 13/1 (1986), pp. 131-133.
  2. Ahmed Al-Shahi, "Peter Lienhardt 1928-1986: Biographical Notes and Bibliography", JASO (Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford) 27/2 (1996)
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