Fanula Papazoglu | |
---|---|
Fanula Papazoglu imprisoned at the Banjica concentration camp, 1942
|
|
Born |
Bitola, Kingdom of Serbia |
February 3, 1917
Died | January 26, 2001 Belgrade, FR Yugoslavia |
(aged 83)
Residence | Belgrade |
Nationality | Yugoslav, Serbian |
Fields | Ancient history |
Alma mater | University of Belgrade |
Spouse | George Ostrogorsky |
Fanula Papazoglu (Serbian: Фанула Папазоглу, Greek: Φανούλα Παπάζογλου/Fanoula Papazoglou, 1917– January 26, 2001) was a Yugoslav and Serbian classical scholar, epigrapher and academic. She was an expert in Ancient history of the Balkans. She founded the Centre for Ancient Epigraphy and Numismatics in 1970.
Papazoglu was born in Bitola, Kingdom of Serbia (modern R. Macedonia), into a family of Greek origin. She finished secondary school (1936) in Bitola, before attending the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy, where she studies classical philology, ancient history, and archeology. During the Axis occupation of Serbia she supported the Yugoslav Partisans as a member of the student organization, and spent a year in the Banjica concentration camp from 1942 to 1943.
She graduated from the Faculty of Philosophy in 1946, and worked at the Department for Ancient History at the Faculty of Philosophy from 1947. Her Ph.D. thesis in 1955 was Macedonian towns during the Roman period. She became a full professor in 1965.
On March 21, 1974 she was elected to the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (SANU) as a corresponding member, and became a full member on December 15, 1983.