Julius Heinrich Petermann
Julius Heinrich Petermann | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | June 10, 1876 | (aged 74)
Occupation | Orientalist |
Julius Heinrich Petermann (August 12, 1801, in Glauchau – June 10, 1876, in Bad Nauheim) was a German Orientalist.[1]
Biography
In 1829, Petermann received his PhD in Berlin for a dissertation on the
Masonic Lodge, Friedrich Wilhelm zur gekrönten Gerechtigkeit.[citation needed
]
Works
- Grammatica linguae armenicae (1837), Berlin
- De Ostikanis, Arabicis Armeniae gubernatoribus, Berlin, 1840
- Contributions to a history of the latest reforms of the Ottoman Empire, German and Turkish (with Ramiz Efendi), Berlin, 1842
- Epistola ad Philemonem speciminis loco ad fidem versionum Orientalium veterum, Berlin, 1844
- Pater Ignatii Patris Apostolici quae feruntur Epistolae, Leipzig, 1849
- Pistis Sophia: opus gnosticum (1851)[2]
- Contributions to the history of the Crusades from Armenian sources, Berlin, 1860
- Journeys in the Orient, 1st edition. 2 vols. Leipzig, 1860 and 1861
- Journeys in the Orient, 2nd edition. Leipzig, 1865[3]
- Thesaurus sive liber magnus liber vulgo Adami appellatus, 2 parts, Leipzig, 1867 (Syriac and Latin versions of the Ginza Rabba)
- Attempt at a Hebraic morphology based on the Speech of Present-day Samaritans, 1868
- Pentateuchus Samaritanus, 5 vols. Berlin, 1872–91.[4]
- Porta linguarum Orientalium (Editor) Vol. 1–4, 6, Berlin
- Brevis linguae hebraicae, 1864
- Brevis linguae arabicae, 1867
- Brevis linguae armenicae, 1872
- Brevis linguae chaldaicae, 1872
References
- ^ a b Hartmut Bobzin (2001) "Petermann, Julius Heinrich", Neue Deutsche Biographie Vol.20 p.238 (German)
- ^ Pistis Sophia at the Internet Archive (Coptic script)
- ^ Reisen im Orient 1852–1855 Vol.2 (Google eBook)
- Samaritan alphabet)
External links
- Works by Julius Heinrich Petermann at the German National Library (German)