Floyd Lounsbury

Floyd Lounsbury

Dr. Floyd Glenn Lounsbury (April 25, 1914 - May 14, 1998) was an American linguist, anthropologist and Mayanist scholar and epigrapher, best known for his work on linguistic and cultural systems of a variety of North and South American languages. Equally important were his contributions to understanding the hieroglyphs, culture and history of the Maya civilization of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.

Early life

Lounsbury was born in Stevens Point, Wisconsin to John Glenn Lounsbury and Anna Louise Jorgensen. He was one of three children - he had a brother, Gordon, and a sister, Elva.

He graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1941, majoring in Mathematics. During the period, Morris Swadesh was on the faculty, lecturing on American Indian linguistics. Lounsbury audited his courses, and when Swadesh received grants from the Works Progress Administration for a study of the Oneida Indian language and folk lore, he appointed Lounsbury as his assistant. When Swadesh left Wisconsin for Mexico City, Lounsbury took over as the director of the project. He created an orthography for the language, and taught it to students who gathered a variety of texts from Oneida language speakers. After the project, Lounsbury began work in 1940 on the phonology of the language for his Master's degree at the University.

Career

When World War II broke out, he enrolled as a metereologist in the XXII Weather Squadron, US Army Air Corps. Stationed in Brazil, he learned Portuguese there. He received his Master's degree in 1946. Awarded a fellowship by the Rockefeller Foundation, he worked on Oneida verb morphology in the department of anthropology at Yale. He received his Ph.D. in 1949, and his dissertation formed the basis of a publication in 1953 that established a framework and terminology followed ever since in the analysis of Iroquoian languages. He joined the department in 1949, and taught there until his retirement in 1979.

Contributions

He traced the historical relationship between various Iroquoian languages, and as part of his work for the New York Vermont Interstate Commission on the Lake Champlain Basin, wrote an authoritative study of Iroquois place names in the Champlain Valley. He, amongst others, pioneered the analysis of kinship and social organization by applying linguistic methods. He, along with his student Bryan Gick, also recorded the Oneida Creation myth in 1971 in Ontario. This was to result in a book, published posthumously, that included the creation myth and references to versions translated earlier, and linguistic analysis of various aspects of Iroquoian stories.

His linguistics work also had a bearing on his anthropological studies - he used his knowledge of semantic fields to relate kin type to phones in the field of phonetics.

Lounsbury was an early proponent of Yuri Knorozov's phonetic theory on the Maya hieroglyphs, that they were syllables rather than ideograms. He contributed to the methodology that ultimately led to the deciphering of the hieroglyphs. He was part of the trio, Linda Schele and Peter Mathews being the others, that one afternoon in 1973, worked out a 200 year timeline of the Palenque royal family, presenting it that evening at the First Palenque Round Table.

During this period, Lounsbury developed his Mesoamerican Long Count calendar correlation, a method that allows translation of a given Long Count date into its comparable Western calendar date. This correlation is expressed as the difference between the start of the Julian Period (January 1, 4713 BCE) to the start of the Long Count on 0.0.0.0.0 (4 Ajaw, 8 Kumk'u). Lounsbury arrived at an offset of 584,285, two days more than the now-standard GMT correlation of 584,283.

He lived in East Haven, and died of congestive heart failure at Connecticut Hospice.

He married Masako Yokoyama and they had a daughter, the novelist and film-maker Ruth Ozeki.

Appointments and Awards

*Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioural Sciences, 1963-64
*Elected to National Academy of Sciences, 1969
*Awarded the Wilbur Cross Medal by the Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 1971
*Senior Research Scholar, Dumbarton Oaks, Washington D.C., 1973-74 and 1977-78
*Elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1976
*Appointed the Sterling Professor Emeritus of Anthropology by the Yale University, 1979
*Elected to American Philosophical Society, 1987
*Awarded an honorary Doctorate by the University of Pennsylvania, 1987
*Delivered the Distinguished Lecture at the American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting, 1990

Bibliography

*"Phonology of the Oneida Language" MA Thesis, University of Wisconsin, 1946
*"Stray Number Systems among Certain Indian Tribes" American Anthropologist XLVIII, 1948
*"Oneida Verb Morphology" Yale University Press, 1953
*"The Method of Descriptive Morphology" in Readings in Linguistics ed. E P Hamp, M Joos, F W Householder and R Austerlitz, University of Chicago Press, 1953
*"A Semantic Analysis of Pawnee Kinship Usage" Language XXXII, 1956
*"Iroquois Place-Names in the Champlain Valley" University of the State of New York, Albany, 1960
*"Iroquois-Cherokee Linguistic Relations" Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin CLXXX, 1961
*"A Formal Account of the Crow- and Omaha- type Kinship Terminologies" in Explorations in Cultural Anthropology, ed. W Goodenough, McGraw-Hill, 1964
*"Another View of the Trobriand Kinship Categories" in Formal Semantic Analysis, ed. E Hammel, American Anthropological Association, 1965
*"A Study in Structural Semantics: The Sirionó Kinship System" with Harold W. Scheffler. Prentice-Hall, 1971
*"On the Derivation and Reading of the "Ben-Ich" Affix" in Mesoamerican Writing Systems, 1973
*"Pacal" in First Palenque Round Table, ed. M G Robertson, Pre-Columbian Art Research, 1974
*"A Rationale for the Initial Date of the Temple of the Cross at Palenque" in The Art, Iconography and Dynastic History of Palenque, ed. M G Robertson, Pre-Columbian Art Research Institute, 1976
*"Parentage Expressions in Classic Maya Inscriptions" with L Schele and P Mathews, International Conference on Maya Iconography and Hieroglyphic Writing Guatemala City, 1977
*"Maya Numeration, Computation, and Calendrical Astronomy" in Dictionary of Scientific Biography XV, ed. C C Gillespie, Scribners, 1978
*"A Solution for the Number 1.5.5.0", in The Sky in Mayan Literature, edited by A. Aveni, Oxford U, Press, 1992.
*"Some Problems in the Interpretation of the Mythological Portion of the Hieroglyphic Text of the Temple of the Cross at Palenque" in Third Palenque Round Table, ed. M G Robertson, 1978
*"Astronomical Knowledge and Its Uses at Bonampak, Mexico in Archaeoastronomy" in the New World : American Primitive Astronomy, ed. A F Aveni, Cambridge University Press, 1982
*"Glyphic Substitutions: Homophonic and Synonymic in Phoneticism" in Mayan Hieroglyphic Writing, ed. J S Justeson and L Campbell, Institute for Mesoamerican Studies, State University of New York at Albany, 1984
*"The Identities of the Mythological Figures in the Cross Group Inscriptions of Palenque" in Fourth Palenque Round Table, ed. M G Robertson and E P Benson, Pre-Columbian Art Research Institute, 1985
*"The Ancient Writing of Middle America" in The Origins of Writing, ed. W Senner, University of Nebraska Press, 1989
*"A Palenque King and the Planet Jupiter" in World Archaeastronomy, ed. A F Aveni, Cambridge University Press, 1989
*"Recent Work in the Decipherment of Palenque's Hieroglyphic Inscriptions" American Anthropologist XCIII, 1991
* [http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/bookinfo/3912.html "The Oneida Creation Story"] by Demus Elm and Harvey Antone, Translated and edited by Lounsbury and Bryan Gick, 2000

External links

* [http://www.mesoweb.com/pari/publications/RT01/RT01_01.html Floyd Lounsbury explains the meaning of the Pacal glyph]
* [http://www.yale.edu/opa/newsr/98-05-19-01.all.html Obituary] -Yale University


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