Abraham Wasserstein
Abraham "Addi" Wasserstein was a German-born British and Israeli classicist, a professor of classics at the University of Leicester in the UK and then at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Early life
Wasserstein was born in Frankfurt am Main in Germany on 5 October 1921. His parents were Galician; his father was a raincoat manufacturer in Berlin. Wasserstein was educated at a Jewish school in Berlin, although his education was disrupted by the rise of Nazism in Germany. As a Jew his life was endangered due to the virulent antisemitism, and he was among those Jews expelled towards Poland on 28 October 1938. Denied entry by the Poles, he spent a year in a camp on the border at Zbąszyń, before leaving for Rome in later summer 1939 and then to Turkey, and finally Palestine in 1941, where he met his wife-to-be, Margaret, a fellow refugee.Academic career
Wasserstein came to Britain at the end of World War II, in 1946, gaining a BA with first-class honours and then a PhD at Birkbeck College, London. His first academic post was as an Assistant to the Department of Greek under Arnold Gomme at the University of Glasgow in 1951, converted three months later to a lectureship. He held the post until 1960, when he was appointed professor of classics at the University of Leicester. He was appointed Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Chairman of the SCR in his later years at the university. Wasserstein left Leicester in 1969 for the chair in Classics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He spent most of his time, however, teaching at the University of Tel Aviv as few students in Jerusalem wanted to study Greek. He worked on manuscripts from the library at Saint Catherine's Monastery on Mount Sinai, and was President of the Classical Association of Israel between 1971 and 1974.Personal life
Wasserstein married his wife Margaret, in 1942. Macca, was born in Budapest, the daughter of a carpenter. The Wassersteins had a daughter, Celia,, and two sons, Bernard,, and David. Wasserstein died in Jerusalem on 20 July 1995.Publications
- 1961, Economy and Elegance: An Inaugural Lecture Delivered at the University, Leicester, 23 February 1961, Leicester University Press.
- 1974, Flavius Josephus: Selections from his works, introduction and notes by Abraham Wasserstein, Viking Press.
- 1982, Galen's Commentary on the Hippocratic Treatise Airs, Waters, Places in the Hebrew Translation of Solomon ha-Me'ati.
- 2006, finished by his son David J. Wasserstein after his death, The Legend of the Septuagint from Classical Antiquity to Today, Cambridge University Press.
- Three festschrifts, Studies in Memory of Abraham Wasserstein, were published in 1996, 1997 and 1998, respectively, by the Israel Society for the Promotion of Classical Studies.