The distinguished French classical scholar Jacqueline de Romilly, who was only the second woman to enter the elite Academie Francaise, has died aged 97, her publisher Bernard de Fallois said Sunday. Jacqueline de Romilly, who died on Saturday, was a philologist and expert on the civilisation and language of ancient Greece, who over a period of 60 years wrote a large body of work.
She was the first woman to be nominated to the prestigious College de France, a research and teaching institution in Paris, and was elected to the Academie Francaise in 1988, only the second woman after the writer Marguerite Yourcenar.
A foreign guest member of the Athens Academy, she obtained Greek nationality in 1995 and was named ambassador of Hellenism by the Greek government. As well as being an academic, she also wrote fiction.
"She is a woman who devoted her entire life to Greek language and culture because she considered it an education in the comprehension of the liberty of the individual and the importance of democracy," she said.