Ò°ÀÇÉçÇø

Skip to main content

More news stories from the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures

Newsroom

Social media

Latest news

04
December
2025
|
14:11
Europe/London

In Memoriam: Professor Roger Ling (1942–2025), Distinguished Scholar of Roman Art

The Department of Art History at the University of Ò°ÀÇÉçÇø mourns the loss of Professor Roger Ling, a world-leading authority on Roman art and architecture, whose lifelong dedication to teaching and research shaped generations of students and scholars.

Roger Ling

ROGER LING, Professor of Classical Art and Archaeology

It is very sad to report that Roger Ling, a distinguished member of the Art History staff at the University of Ò°ÀÇÉçÇø for more than 50 years - as lecturer, senior lecturer, Professor, and emeritus - died at the beginning of November after a long illness.  During much of that time the Department had expanded to its maximum extent in terms of personnel and breadth of interests, which extended from the classical to modern periods. But early on it was Roger who for a number of years singlehandedly saw to the teaching of ancient and classical art at all undergraduate and postgraduate levels, until he was joined by colleagues with interests in early Greece and pre-Roman Italy, as well as in Minoan and Egyptian art, enabling him to concentrate more on the Roman world.                 

Roger was, in international terms, a leading historian of ancient Roman art and architecture. His deep knowledge of Pompeii originated from his PhD on stuccowork in Roman Italy, and he went on to publish many books on related topics, including Roman painting (on which he wrote the standard English textbook), and mosaics - he was also a frequent contributor to the journal Mosaic which focused on the rich material of Roman Britain. But Roger’s lasting monument is the four-volume Insula of the Menander at Pompeii published by Oxford University Press, to which his wife Lesley, who died three years before him, was a major contributor and was co-author of volume 2 (on the wall decorations). This housing block occupied a large residential space in the ancient town and encompassed a number of dwellings along with various service areas. As well as meticulous recording of archaeological detail, the Menander volumes offer a fascinating human history concerning the different social classes that inhabited the various parts of the insula at different periods, from the impoverished to families of the highest rank.    

For all the time that he worked at Ò°ÀÇÉçÇø, Roger and Lesley lived a characteristically austere life in beautiful but remote parts of the High Peak near Buxton. Internet receptivity could never be relied on. Without a television, Roger would go over to friends and neighbours, or the local pub, to follow his favourite team, Watford FC. Without a car, he would ski across the fields in winter to the local station at Chapel-en-le-Frith to catch the Ò°ÀÇÉçÇø train in time for his early morning lectures. Occasionally he would sleep over in his office in the department if the weather got too bad for the return journey. But with a knowing smile, Roger remained cheerful and imperturbable in almost all circumstances. Only departmental meetings succeeded in disturbing his equilibrium.

Share this page