Luise Klebs
Luise Klebs was a German Egyptologist best known for a three-volume, scene-indexed corpus of ancient Egyptian reliefs and wall paintings covering the Old, Middle and New Kingdoms. Compiled largely at the Aegyptologisches Institut of the University of Heidelberg, her handbooks became widely used reference tools for comparative study of iconography, while the New Kingdom volume appeared posthumously in 1934.
Life
Klebs was born in Tübingen as Luise Charlotte Therese von Sigwart, daughter of the philosopher and logician Christoph von Sigwart. She married the botanist Georg Albrecht Klebs in Tübingen on 20 March 1888 and subsequently followed his appointments to Basel, Halle and Heidelberg.After completing the manuscript for the New Kingdom volume in early 1931, Klebs left Heidelberg for a period of rest abroad. She fell ill in Switzerland and died on Pentecost Sunday, 24 May 1931, in Lugano.
Career and works
Klebs worked for many years as an independent scholar associated with the Aegyptologisches Institut. There she compiled extensive note files and indices of figural scenes and technical motifs from tomb and temple decoration, collating material from publications and museum collections. The preface to her posthumous volume states that she left the manuscript “fully press-ready” after “years of tireless work” at the institute and describes the series as “a hand tool long since become indispensable.”Her project issued as Material zur ägyptischen Kultur-/Kunstgeschichte was arranged thematically by activities with comprehensive literature lists and registers. A planned companion volume on “the life of the elite” was noted but never appeared; at the time of her death, Agnes Würz was preparing that fourth, concluding volume from Klebs’s card files.