Toivari-Viitala was born in
Loviisa on 16 May 1964. She was passionate about Ancient Egypt since her childhood. This work examined many aspects of women's lives there, including sex, maternity and property ownership.
Career Toivari-Viitala was one of the editors of
The Deir el-Medina Database (an online index of texts from Deir el-Medîna, compiled at Leiden University from 1998), to which she contributed for many years. She was appointed head of the Department of Egyptology at the
University of Helsinki. From 2008-13 she led the project
Ihminen ja ympäristö (Man and the Environment), which was funded by the
Academy of Finland in order to study and record part of the
UNESCO World Heritage Site at
Thebes. In 2009, she curated the exhibition
Egypt! Egypt! Egypt! which brought objects from collections across Europe to Finland, marking the 40th anniversary of the Finnish Egyptology Society.
Research Toivari-Viitala's research examined the role women played in Egyptian life, particularly in terms of economics and administration. She was also an expert on Egyptian love poetry, personal names and hieroglyphics. The link between the astronomical phenomenon and the specific manuscript was first raised by Toivari-Viitala and was widely reported, including in the
New Scientist. Toivari-Viitala died suddenly in
Helsinki on 12 May 2017. == References ==