. In Greece, he was a fellow at the
American School of Classical Studies at Athens between 1911 and 1913, during which time he worked on excavations at
Locris,
Corinth and
Korakou. During
World War I Blegen was involved with relief work in Bulgaria and Macedonia, receiving the
Order of the Redeemer from Greece in 1919. After the war he completed his
Ph.D. at
Yale in 1920. He was then assistant director of the American School between 1920 and 1926; during his tenure he excavated at Zygouries,
Phlius,
Prosymna, and
Hymettos. In 1927, Blegen joined the faculty of the
University of Cincinnati. Blegen was professor of
classical archaeology at the University of Cincinnati from 1927 to 1957. His excavations at
Troy were performed between 1932 and 1938, followed by those at the
Palace of Nestor in
Pylos, Greece, which began in 1939 and resumed after the
Second World War in 1952, continuing until 1966. Many of the finds from this excavation are housed in the
Archaeological Museum of Chora. Blegen retired in 1957. He received honorary degrees from the
University of Oslo and the
University of Thessaloniki in 1951; an honorary
D.Litt. from the
University of Oxford in 1957 and an honorary
LL.D. from the
University of Cincinnati in 1958. Further honorary degrees came in 1963: Litt.D. from
Cambridge, and others from the University of
Athens,
Hebrew Union College,
Jewish Institute of Religion in
Jerusalem. In 1965 Blegen became the first recipient of the
Archaeological Institute of America's
Gold Medal for archaeological achievement. Blegen was elected to the
American Philosophical Society in 1941 and the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1959. The Carl Blegen Library is located on the campus of the University of Cincinnati. The library has curated an exhibit named
Discovering Carl Blegen which includes images from Blegen's major campaigns in Troy and Pylos as well as his work and life at UC and abroad. The Blegen Library at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens is named also after Carl Blegen. Blegen Hall on the
University of Minnesota Twin City Campus is named for his brother
Theodore C. Blegen. ==Personal life==