Background
Tahsin Özgüç was born in Kardzhali, Bulgaria to Turkish parents.
anthropologist archaeologist university professor
Tahsin Özgüç was born in Kardzhali, Bulgaria to Turkish parents.
He was educated at the Faculty of Philology, History and Geography in Ankara University, graduating 1940.
His long career, began after the World World War II and lasted up to the present, made him doyen of Anatolian archaeology. Following his doctorate in 1942 at the same faculty, he became assistant between 1945 and 1946 and lecturer from 1946 to 1954, the year when he was appointed professor Özgüç served as the dean of the faculty in the years 1968–1969.
In the time between 1969 and 1980, he was rector of the same university.
Following his retirement in 1981, he was five years long in charge of vice chairman of the High Education Council of Turkey. Özgüç contributed much to Anatolian archaeology with his students, archaeological excavations and more than 100 scientific articles and books published.
He lectured as guest professor in 1962–1964 at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, United States of America, in 1964 at the Saarland University and in 1975–1976 at the University of Munich, Germany. Ozgüç was the excavator of the famous site of Kültepe (Kayseri), ancient Kanesh, where his 57 years of continuous excavation produced sensational architectural artifacts and texts, revealing in extraordinary detail the first historical period of Anatolia, that of the Assyrian merchant colonies, about 2000–1700 British Columbia. He also led excavations in Karahöyük Elbistan, Horoztepe (Tokat), Altıntepe (Erzincan), Maşathöyük, Kazankaya and Kululu.
Tahsin Özgüç died on October 28, 2005, in Ankara.
Free University of Berlin, Germany
University of Munich, Germany
Ghent University, Belgium.
German Archaeological Institute. Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities]
Özgüç was member of several scientific institutions, such as Turkish Historical Institute, German Archaeological Institute, British Academy, American Archaeological Institute, Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, City of London Archaeological Society and Institute of Archaeology in Turkey.