Gáti Csilla (szerk.): A Janus Pannonius Múzeum Évkönyve 54., 2016-2017 (Pécs, 2017)

IN MEMORIAM - Köhler Kitti – Kiss Kinga – Hajdu Tamás – Gábor Olivér: In memoriam K. Zoffmann Zsuzsanna (1941–2016)

In memoriam K. Zoffmann Zsuzsanna (1941–2016) 623 rajongása, jó humora és éleslátása mind-mind különleges egyéniséggé tették. Szakma iránti elhivatottsága, lelkesedése ezeken a sűrű cigarettafüstben lezaj­lott beszélgetéseken szinte átragadt arra a kevés fiatal antropológusra, akiket tanítványainak tekintett, és akik közel álltak hozzá. Tavaly volt 75 éves. 2016. június 20-án a Magyar Biológiai Társaság Em­bertani Szakosztálya 385. szakülését Zsuzsa születésnapja megünneplésének tervezte szentelni. 2016. június 17-én azonban eltávozott közülünk, hatalmas űrt hagyva maga után. Emlékét családja, kollégái, barátai, tanítványai és a Janus Pannonius Múze­um munkatársai szeretettel őrzik. In memorian Zsuzsanna Zoffmann Kitti Köhler – Kinga Kiss – Tamás Hajdu – Olivér Gábor Zsuzsanna Zoffmann spent 7 years working for the Janus Pannonius Museum between 1966 and 1973. She did not only worked here, but with her husband, Attila, she also lived in the 12 Széchenyi Square building, which today houses the Archeology Department. ?rough our personal experiences, during our en­counters with her, everyone was unmistakably acquainted with, accustomed to and expected Zsuzsa’s eternal attributes: the bun, the gray pants, the cardigan, the thick curtain of cigarette smoke, the coffee and her constant lunch, the cake and the glitteringly cheerful eyes, the cruelly soul-digging questions and her characteristic deep voice. As the first and last anthropologist of Janus Pannonius Museum, she started to organize and process the anthropological collection of Pécs, one of the country’s most important anthropological collections. From 1973 until her retirement, she continued his work at the Archaeologi­cal Department of the Hungarian National Museum as a museologist and later as a senior research fellow. During the years spent in Pécs and later in the National Museum, the main interest of her research was the prehistoric population history of the Carpathi­an Basin. Her work, however, was far more diverse than that. A?er her retirement (in 1996) she remained active until the end of his life, as evidenced by many of her studies.

Next

/
Thumbnails
Contents