Everything about Richard Nelson Frye totally explained
Richard Nelson Frye (c. 1920) is an
American scholar of
Iranian and
Central Asian Studies, and
Aga Khan Professor Emeritus of Iranian Studies at
Harvard University. His professional areas of interest are Iranian
philology, and the history of
Iran and
Central Asia before 1000 CE.
Born in
Birmingham,
Alabama to a family of immigrants from
Sweden, "Freij" has four children, his second marriage being to an
Assyrian scholar, Dr. Eden Naby, from
Urmia,
Iran who teaches at
Columbia University. He speaks fluent
Russian,
German,
Arabic,
Persian,
French,
Pashto,
Uzbek, and
Turkish, and has extensive knowledge of
Avestan,
Pahlavi,
Sogdian, and other Iranian languages and dialects, both extinct and current.
Career
Frye first attended the
University of Illinois, where he received an AB in history and philosophy in 1939. He received his MA from
Harvard University in 1940 and his PhD from Harvard in 1946, in
Asiatic history.
Frye served with the
Office of Strategic Services during
World War II. He was stationed in
Afghanistan and traveled extensively in the
Middle East,
Central Asia, and
South Asia.
He returned to Harvard to teach. He was a member of the Harvard faculty from 1948 until 1990. He is now a professor emeritus at Harvard. He has also served as faculty, guest lecturer, or visiting scholar at:
Professor Frye founded the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard, the first
Iranian studies program in America. He also served as Director of the
Asia Institute in
Shiraz (1970-1975), was on the Board of Trustees of the
Pahlavi University at
Shiraz (1974-78), and Chairman,
Committee on Inner Asian Studies, at Harvard (1983-89), and as Editor of the
Bulletin of the Asia Institute (1970-1975 and 1987-99).
Image:Frye Tehran.jpg|Frye giving a lecture in Tehran in 2004, after receiving a lifetime achievement award from the "Mahmoud Afshar Foundation".
Image:Frye Shiraz.jpg|Frye in debate with a cleric in Shiraz, 1992.
Image:Frye Ghirshman.jpg|A young Frye and Roman Ghirshman, Susa, 1966.
Image:Frye Afshar.jpg|Frye and prominent Iranian scholar Iraj Afshar in 2004 in Tehran.
Among Frye's students were
Annemarie Schimmel,
Oleg Grabar(External Link
),
Frank Huddle (former US Ambassador to
Tajikistan),
John Limbert, and
Michael Crichton, whose
Hollywood film
The 13th Warrior is loosely based on Frye's translation of
Ibn Fadlan's account of his travels up the river
Volga.
Frye was also directly responsible for inviting Iranian scholars as distinguished visiting fellows to Harvard University, under a fellowship program initiated by
Henry Kissinger. Examples of such guests include
Mehdi Haeri Yazdi (1923–1999),
Sadegh Choubak,
Jalal al Ahmad, and others.
Frye as proponent of Persian culture
Frye felt that
Persian civilization was under-appreciated by other
Muslims, and
Arab Muslims in particular. Frye wrote:
» "
Arabs no longer understand the role of Iran and the Persian language in the formation of Islamic culture. Perhaps they wish to forget the past, but in so doing they remove the bases of their own spiritual, moral and cultural being…without the heritage of the past and a healthy respect for it…there is little chance for stability and proper growth."
:
(R. N. Frye, The Golden Age of Persia, London: Butler & Tanner Ltd., 1989, page 236)
Iranians responded enthusiastically to his appreciation.
In August 1953, shortly before
Mosaddegh's fall, the prominent Iranian linguist
Ali Akbar Dehkhoda gave Frye the title (
laqab): "Irandoost" (meaning "a friend of Iran").
A ceremony was held in Iran on June 27, 2004 to pay tribute to the six-decade endeavors of Professor Frye on his lifetime contribution to
Iranology, research work on the
Persian language, and the history and culture of
Iran.
In his will, Professor Frye has expressed his wish to be buried next to the
Zayandeh River in
Isfahan.
This request was approved by Iranian president
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in September 2007.
Two other American Iranologists,
Arthur Pope and
Phyllis Ackerman, are already buried there.
Frye as public speaker
Frye is a popular public speaker at numerous Iran-related gatherings. In 2005, he spoke at
UCLA, encouraging the Persians present to cherish their culture and identity
(External Link
),
(External Link
). In 2004, he spoke at an architectural conference in Tehran, expressing his dismay at hasty modernization that ignores the beauties of traditional Persian architecture (see
Architecture of Tehran).
Bibliography
The Near East and the Great Powers, Harvard University Press, 1951
Iran, George Allen and Unwin, London, 1960
The Heritage of Persia: The pre-Islamic History of One of the World's Great Civilizations, World Publishing Company, New York, 1963
Bukhara: The Medieval Achievement, University of Oklahoma Press, 1965
The Histories of Nishapur, Harvard University Press, 1965
Corpus Inscriptionum Iranicarum, vol. III, Dura-Europos, London, 1968
Persia (3rd edition) Allen and Unwin, London, 1969
The United States and Turkey and Iran, Archon Books, 1971
Sasanian Remains from Qasr-i Abu Nasr. Seals, Sealings, and Coins, Harvard University Press, 1973
Neue Methodologie in der Iranistik, Wiesbaden, 1974
The Golden Age Of Persia: The Arabs in the East, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1993
The heritage of Central Asia from antiquity to the Turkish expansion Markus Wiener, Princeton, 1996
Notes on the Early Coinage of Transoxania; Numismatic Notes, 113, American Numismatic Association, New York
Greater Iran, Mazda Publishers, 2005, ISBN 1-56859-177-2
Ibn Fadlan's Journey To Russia, 2005, Markus Wiener Publishe, ISBN 1-55876-366-XFurther Information
Get more info on 'Richard Nelson Frye'.
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