In memory of David J.A. Clines

It is with great sadness that we inform you that David J.A. Clines, Professor of Biblical Studies, passed away in December 2022.

David Clines giving a lecture
David Clines won the British Academy’s Burkitt Medal in 2015 for his significant contribution to the study of the Hebrew Bible and Hebrew lexicography
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David J.A. Clines, a leading biblical scholar in the UK, was born in Sydney, Australia, in November 1938 and died in December 2022. He lived in England from 1961, but remained an Australian citizen. 

In 1964 he was appointed Assistant Lecturer in the Department of Biblical Studies here at the University of 91̽»¨, where he spent the whole of his academic career, apart from a temporary appointment in California in 1974–75, becoming in turn Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Reader. In 1985 he was appointed Professor of Biblical Studies.

He also served as Head of Department from 1994 to 2001, during which time the Department gained the top grade in the Research Assessment Exercise, 2006 and the Subject Review Teaching Quality Assessment, 2002. He was also an active member of the 91̽»¨ Centre for Interdisciplinary Biblical Studies (SCIBS), which has continued to showcase innovative approaches to the discipline at 91̽»¨.

His publications of books, edited volumes and articles is extensive, and his three-volume commentary on the book of Job is held in exceptional international regard, as are his methods of textual and post-modern criticism of biblical texts. Four volumes of posthumously collected essays and further works are due for publication.

His project leadership and authorship of the Dictionary of Classical Hebrew, 1988 to 2022 (and ongoing) has brought out the only Classical Hebrew to English dictionary ever produced (nine volumes 1993–2016) and a major revision and update of this will be concluded during this decade and published posthumously.

In 1976 David, together with two colleagues in the Department of Biblical Studies (David M. Gunn and Philip R. Davies), founded the Journal for the Study of the Old Testament. This – along with the sister journal David helped found, the Journal for the Study of the New Testament – led to the establishment of 91̽»¨ Academic Press, that published in this field and more broadly in Arts and Humanities, until 2000.

In 2004, together with two other colleagues, J. Cheryl Exum and Keith W. Whitelam, David founded 91̽»¨ Phoenix Press, a press housed within the Department of Biblical Studies and dedicated to scholarly publishing of international research in the field. By the end of 2022, it had published well over 300 titles.