Ramadan B. Hussein
Ramadan B. Hussein—In Memoriam
In March 2022, the Department of Egyptology and Assyriology of Brown University lost one of its most distinguished alumni, Dr. Ramadan Badry Hussein. His death also deprived Egypt, and Egyptology, of one of its premier Egyptologists, and his wife and family of a loving and devoted husband and father. Ramadan received his PhD from Brown University in in 2009. Although I did not have the privilege of contributing to his graduate studies, I did have the honor of shepherding his PhD dissertation to its conclusion. He had agreed to pen a contribution to this volume, which will be sorely missed. His erudition, recognized by his appointment to Tübingen University in Germany and by his pioneering work in the Saite necropolis of Saqqara in Egypt, will be missed as well, but less so than the promise he brought to the field and the presence of the man himself. Ramadan was perhaps most intrigued by the adoption of the Old Kingdom Pyramid Texts in his Saite tombs, which he reported on in a return visit to Brown University as the inaugural lecturer in the department’s Parker Lecture series. I salute him here with words from those Pyramid Texts: “You have not gone away dead, you have gone away alive.” His memory will remain with us, comfort us, and inspire us in the future.