Arthur Bernard Cook

Arthur Bernard Cook FBA (22 October 1868 – 26 April 1952) was a British archeologist and classical scholar, best known for his three-part work, Zeus: A Study in Ancient Religion.

Cook's poem Windsor Castle won the Chancellor's Gold Medal for poetry at Cambridge in 1889.

He became the Laurence Professor of Classical Archaeology at Cambridge in 1931, where he had held the position as Reader, until 1934.

[5] Cook was elected as a fellow of the British Academy for the humanities and social sciences in 1941.

[4] Cook is often considered one of the Cambridge Ritualists, and although he did not produce theoretical works, he has been called "perhaps the most typical disciple" of J. G.