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Antonio Zampolli's Obituary
Professor Antonio Zampolli died suddenly and tragically on 22 August 2003. He was one of
the founders of the ALLC in 1973, and a major pioneer in the application of computational
techniques in literary and linguistic research from the 1960s. He was President of the
Association from 1983 to the time of his death in 2003. His passing will be mourned by all
ALLC members as well as countless colleagues around the world.
He was a moving spirit in the establishment of many other institutions and activities,
including the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) and the European Language Resources Association
(ELRA), and he will be hugely missed in these and many other communities, not least in the
research centre in computational linguistics which he founded in Pisa, and more widely by
colleagues in the University of Pisa and in the city itself.
The obituary which appears below is by Michael Sperberg-McQueen, a long-serving member of
the ALLC Committee who worked closely with Professor Zampolli throughout the life of the
Text Encoding Initiative Project as North American Editor. This obituary first appeared on
the TEI-L discussion list, and has been slightly changed by agreement with the author.
Following this are a few photographs kindly
supplied by John Unsworth.
An obituary tribute will also be published in the Association's journal, Literary and
Linguistic Computing.
The Association is actively discussing appropriate ways to honour the life and work of
Antonio Zampolli, and to establish lasting memorials to his achievements. Suggestions are
invited from any members of the Association or others interested in promoting the life-long
interests of our departed friend and colleague. We miss above all his energy,
enthusiasm and humour.
Harold Short
Chair, ALLC
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