|
About
the Faculty
Bentley Layton
Professor
of Coptic studies; Goff Professor of Religious Studies
bentley.layton@yale.edu
Bentley
Layton (A.B., Ph.D., Harvard University) is Professor of Near
Eastern Languages and Civilizations in the area of Coptic
studies, and Goff Professor of Religious Studies. He teaches
the Coptic language and the literary, intellectual, and social
history of ancient Christianity in the Mediterranean regions.
His specializations include gnosticism and heresies, asceticism
and monasticism, textual editing and manuscript studies, and
Coptic linguistics. Before coming to Yale in 1976, he taught
in Jerusalem at the Ecole biblique et archeologique francaise
and worked in Cairo for the UNESCO Technical Subcommittee
for Publication of the Nag Hammadi Manuscripts. Among his
publications are standard critical editions of fifteen works
found in the ancient Gnostic manuscripts of Nag Hammadi; various
commentaries on these works; Catalogue of Coptic Manuscripts
in the British Library; The Gnostic Scriptures: A
New Translation with Annotations; A Coptic Grammar
with Chrestomathy and Glossary: Sahidic Dialect; Coptic-Gnostic
Chrestomathy; and technical articles on ancient Christian
texts, literature, thought, and history. He is currently writing
on the social history of ancient monasteries, and editing
works of the ancient monastic leader Apa Shenoute. He is past
President of the International Association of Coptic Studies
and has been a Fellow of the Guggenheim Foundation, the National
Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned
Societies, and the Harvard Society of Fellows. For further
information, see
http://www.yale.edu/religiousstudies/facultypages/cvbl.html and Yale Institute in Egypt.
|