Tamara Talbot Rice (1904–1993)
Autor von A Concise History of Russian Art
Über den Autor
Bildnachweis: Tamara Talbot Rice. (Scanned from the dust jacket of Ancient Arts of Central Asia)
Werke von Tamara Talbot Rice
Zugehörige Werke
Die Mittelmeerwelt im Altertum Bd. IV : Das Römische Reich und seine Nachbarn (1966) — Autor — 109 Exemplare
Die Mittelmeerwelt im Altertum Bd. III : Der Aufbau des Römischen Reiches (1966) — Autor — 61 Exemplare
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Wissenswertes
- Gebräuchlichste Namensform
- Rice, Tamara Talbot
- Rechtmäßiger Name
- Talbot Rice, Tamara Abelson
- Geburtstag
- 1904
- Todestag
- 1993
- Begräbnisort
- Churchyard of St Andrew's, Coln Rogers, Gloucestershire, England, UK
- Geschlecht
- female
- Nationalität
- Russisches Reich
Großbritannien - Geburtsort
- St. Petersburg, Russia
- Sterbeort
- Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire, England, UK
- Wohnorte
- St. Petersburg, Russia
Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
Paris, France - Ausbildung
- Oxford University (St. Hugh's College)
Cheltenham Ladies College - Berufe
- ISNI 0000 0001 0929 0612
- Beziehungen
- Rice, David Talbot (husband)
Tolstoy, Leo (godfather)
Waugh, Evelyn (friend)
Acton, Harold (friend) - Kurzbiographie
- Tamara Talbot Rice was born Elena Abelson in St. Petersburg, Russia. Her father Israel Boris Abelevich Abelson was a wealthy businessman and member of the Tsar's financial administration. Leo Tolstoy, a family friend, was her godfather. She had a privileged childhood in St. Petersburg, where she attended the elite Tagantzeva Girls' School, until the Russian Revolution of 1917 caused her family to flee the country. They settled in London and Paris. She attended Cheltenham Ladies' College and then Oxford University, where she was a member of the circle of friends that included Evelyn Waugh, Harold Acton, and David Talbot Rice, her future husband. She left Oxford without a degree and worked at various jobs, including as a film extra, journalist, and researcher. In 1927, she married Talbot Rice, an archaeologist, and spent years traveling with him to Greece, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Georgia, Persia, and Turkey on his excavations. She and her husband co-wrote the book The Icons of Cyprus, published in 1937. During World War II, she worked in the Ministry of Information's Turkish division. After the war, she became a distinguished scholar of Russian and Byzantine art and art historian, and wrote The Scythians (1957), The Seljuks in Asia Minor (1961), and Everyday Life in Byzantium (1967), among others. Her final book was the biography Elizabeth Petrovna, Empress of Russia (1970). After her death, her memoirs were published by her daughter Elizabeth Talbot Rice as Tamara: Memoirs of St. Petersburg, Paris, Oxford and Byzantium (1996).
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