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Obituary
editI have included the text of his Times obituary below for information to support the article:
The Times (London), August 6 1986, Obituary of Dr Richard Barnett
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Dr Richard Barnett, CBE, FBA, FSA, Keeper of Western Asiatic Antiquities at the British Museum from 1955 to 1974 and an authority on archaeology of the ancient world, died on July 29. He was 77. Richard David Barnett was born on January 23, 1909, and as the only son of Lionel David Barnett, the great Indologist, keeper of oriental printed books and manuscripts at the British Museum from 1908-36, he grew up in the Museum atmosphere. After taking a Classics degree at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and spending two years in Athens with a studentship of the British School of Archaeology, he joined the staff of the British Museum as an assistant keeper in the department of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities in 1932. He had wide-ranging interests and his knowledge of classical archaeology fitted him well for the task of sorting and cataloguing the beautiful carved ivories found by Layard and Loftus in the last century at Nimrud. Much preliminary conservation treatment of these delicate pieces was necessary; but, with the interruption of the war, the Catalogue, a mine of information and suggestive ideas, did not appear until 1957. Barnett was away from the museum throughout the war, at the Admiralty and the Foreign Office; and then, from 1942-46, he served as an RAF intelligence officer in Egypt, Syria, Libya and Turkey. After the war, he played an active part in the founding, in 1949, of the British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara, and served on the councils of a number of institutes and schools. The areas of contact between cultures such as Turkey and Western Iran always intrigued him, and many of his most thought-provoking articles dealt with such matters. His major work in the post-war period was, however, the publication of the Assyrian bas-reliefs, and his volumes on The Sculptures of Tiglathpileser III (1962), The Sculptures of Ashurbanipal (1976) and Sennacherib, ready for press, will stand as monuments. Barnett was appointed keeper of the newly-formed department of western Asiatic antiquities at the British Museum in 1955, and soon launched on a vigorous programme of reorganization of the storage areas under his care, establishing departmental conservators to deal with the collections, and creating a students' room for visiting scholars. At the same time, he pursued a judicious and active acquisitions policy. On the more public side, his major reorganization of the Assyrian sculpture galleries made much better sense of this important collection. Bibical history was a strong interest to which he often returned in his publications. For many years, he served committees of the Palestine Exploration Fund and the British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem; he was largely instrumental in founding the Anglo-Israel Archaeological Society; and he concluded his Museum career by opening an Ancient Palestine room. Outside the museum, Barnett played an active part in the life of the Sephardic Jewish community in London, publishing books and articles on Anglo-Jewish history. Richard Barnett was a kind-hearted and lovable man, and though he battled greatly for his Museum department and other causes, he will be very much missed by those who knew him. He leaves a widow, Barbara, whom he married in 1948, two sons and a daughter. |