
Andrew Dalby (born Liverpool, 1947) is an English linguist, translator and historian who most often writes about food history. Dalby studied at the Bristol Grammar School, where he learned some Latin, French and Greek; then at the University of Cambridge. There he studied Latin and Greek at first, afterwards Romance languages and linguistics. He earned a bachelor's degree in 1970. Dalby then worked for fifteen years at Cambridge University Library, eventually specializing in Southern Asia. He gained familiarity with some other languages because of his work there, where he had to work with foreign serials and afterwards with South and Southeast Asian materials. In 1982 and 1983 he collaborated with Sao Saimong in cataloguing the Scott Collection of manuscripts and documents from Burma (especially the Shan States) and Indochina; He was later to publish a short biography of the colonial civil servant and explorer J. G. Scott, who formed the collection.[1] To help him with this task, he took classes in Cambridge again in Sanskrit, Hindi and Pali and in London in Burmese and Thai.
Series
Books

Empire of Pleasures
2000

Siren Feasts
A History of Food and Gastronomy in Greece
1995

The Classical Cookbook
1996

The Shakespeare Cookbook
2012

Tastes of Byzantium
The Cuisine of a Legendary Empire
2003

The World and Wikipedia
How we are editing reality
2009

Cheese
A Global History
2009

Dangerous Tastes
The Story of Spices
2000

Rediscovering Homer
Inside the Origins of the Epic
2006

Bacchus
A Biography
2003

Language in Danger
2002

The Breakfast Book
2013

Dictionary of Languages
1998