A. M. Dale

Amy Marjorie Dale, FBA was a British classicist and academi who published as A. M. Dale. Her research focused on Greek tragedy, especially Euripides and the metre of Greek tragedy’s choral songs and lyric parts, a subject area in which her work remains influential.
Her first academic post was at Westfield College in the University of London (1927-1929), followed by a job at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. During World War II, Dale worked in the Foreign Office, and spent her spare time translating Eduard Fraenkel’s edition of Aeschylus’s Agamemnon into English. She was later offered and accepted a lectureship at Birkbeck College, London. In 1952 she was appointed Reader in Classics, and in 1957 became a Fellow of the British Academy. In 1959, she was honoured with a Personal Chair in Greek and in 1962 was made an Honorary Fellow of Somerville College, Oxford. She became Professor Emeritus in Greek at the University of London when she retired in 1963.

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Élisabeth Sophie Chéron

Although Élisabeth-Sophie Chéron is best remembered today as a painter, she was actually a true Renaissance woman, acclaimed during her lifetime as a talented poet, musician, artist, and academicienne. In her childhood, she was trained by her father in the arts of enamelling and miniature painting. Under the sponsorship of the prominent artist Charles Le Brun, she was admitted to the Académie Royale of Paris as a portrait painter in 1672. She exhibited regularly at the Salon in Paris, while also producing poetry and translations; she was fluent in Hebrew, Greek and Latin. Chéron’s literary talent was recognized in 1694 when she was named a member of Italy’s Accademia dei Ricovrati in Padua, and given the academician name of Erato, after the muse of lyric and love poetry.

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Ina Coolbrith

Ina Donna Coolbrith was an American poet, writer and librarian, prominent in the San Francisco Bay Area literary community. Called the “Sweet Singer of California”, she was the first California Poet Laureate, as well as the first poet laureate of any U.S. state.

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Irena Sawicka

Irena Scheur-Sawicka was a Polish archaeologist, ethnographer, and educational and communist activist who joined the Polish Workers’ Party during World War II.

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Sylvia Townsend Warner

Sylvia Townsend Warner was an English musicologist, novelist and poet, known for works such as the novels Lolly Willowes and After the Death of Don Juan, the poetry collection Whether a Dove or a Seagull and several short story collections.

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Shahjahan Begum

Shah Jahan Begum GCSI CI was the Begum (ruler) of the princely state of Bhopal in central India for two periods: 1844–60 (with her mother acting as regent), and during 1868–1901.

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