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HEINRICH See also: German orientalist and biblical critic, was See also: born at See also: Nordhausen, See also: Hanover, on the 3rd of See also: February 1786
.
In 1803 he became a student of philosophy and See also: theology at the university of See also: Helmstedt, where Heinrich Henke (1752—1809) was his most influential teacher; but the latter See also: part of his university course was taken at See also: Gottingen, where J.•G
.
Eichhorn and T
.
C
.
Tychsen (1758—1834) were then at the height of their popularity
.
In 18o6, shortly after See also: graduation, he became Repetent and Privatdozent in that university; and, as he was fond of afterwards See also: relating, had Neander for his first pupil in See also: Hebrew
.
In 1810 he became professor extraordinarius in theology, and in 1811 ordinarius, at the university of See also: Halle, where, in spite of many offers of high preferment elsewhere, he spent the rest of his See also: life
.
He taught with See also: great regularity for upward of See also: thirty years, the only interruptions being that of 1813—1814 (occasioned by the War of Liberation, during which the university was closed) and those occasioned by two prolonged See also: literary See also: tours, first in 1820 to See also: Paris, See also: London and See also: Oxford with his colleague Johann Karl Thilo (1794—1853) for the examination of rare See also: oriental See also: manuscripts, and in 1835 to See also: England and See also: Holland in connexion with his Phoenician studies
.
He soon became the most popular teacher of Hebrew and of Old Testament introduction and exegesis in
See also: Germany; during his later years his lectures were attended by nearly five See also: hundred students
.
Among his pupils the most eminent were See also: Peter von Bohlen (1796—1840), A
.
G
.
See also: Hoffmann (1769—1864), Hermann See also: Hupfeld, Emil Rodiger (1801—1874), J
.
F . Tuch (18o6—1867), W . Vatke (1806—1882) and TheodorSee also: Benfey (1809—1881)
.
In 1827, after declining an invitation to take Eichhorn's place at Gottingen, Gesenius was made a Consistorialrath; but, apart from the violent attacks to which he, along with his friend and colleague See also: Julius Wegscheider, was in 183o subjected by E
.
W
.
Hengstenberg and his party in the Evangelise/se Kirchenzeitung, on account of his rationalism, his life was uneventful
.
He died at Halle on the 23rd of See also: October 1842
.
To Gesehius belongs in a large measure the See also: credit of having freed Semitic See also: philology from the trammels of theological and religious prepossession, and of inaugurating the strictly scientific (and See also: comparative) method which has since been so fruitful
.
As an exegete he exercised a powerful, and on the whole a beneficial, influence on theological investigation
.
Of his many See also: works, the earliest, published in 1810, entitled Versuch fiber die maltesische Sprache, was a successful refutation of the widely current opinion that the See also: modern Maltese was of Punic origin
.
In thesame See also: year appeared the first See also: volume of the Hebrdisches u
.
Chaldaisches Handworterbuch, completed in 1812
.
Revised See also: editions of this appear periodically in Germany, e.g. that of H.Limmern and F
.
Buhl (1905)
.
The publication of a new See also: English edition was started in 1892 under the editorship of Professors C
.
A
.
Briggs, S
.
R
.
See also: Driver and F
..
See also: Brown
.
The Hebraische Grammatik, published in 1813 (27th edition by E
.
Kautzsch; English
See also: translation from 25th and 26th German editions by G
.
W
.
See also: Collins and A
.
E . See also: Cowley, 1898), was followed in 1815 by the Geschichte der hebraischen Sprache (now very rare), and in 1817 by the Ausfuhrliches Lehrgebaude der hebraise/ten Sprache
.
The first volume of his well-known commentary on See also: Isaiah (Der See also: Prophet Jesaja), with a translation, appeared in 1821 ; but the See also: work was not completed until 1829
.
The See also: Thesaurus philologico-criticus linguae Hebraicae et Chaldaicae V
.
T., begun in 1829, he did not live to See also: complete; the latter part of the third volume is edited by E
.
Rodiger (1858)
.
Other works: De Pentateuchi Samaritani origine, See also: indole, et auctoritate (1815), supplemented in 1822 and 1824 by the See also: treatise De Samaritanorum theologia, and by an edition of Carmina Samaritana; Palaographische Studien fiber phonizische u. punische Schrift (1835), a pioneering work which he followed up in 1837 by his collection of Phoenician monuments (Scripturae linguaeque Phoeniciae monumenta quotquot supersunt) ; an Aramaic See also: lexicon (1834–1839); and a treatise on the Himyaritic language written in conjunction with E
.
Rodiger in 1841
.
Gesenius also contributed extensively to See also: Ersch and See also: Gruber's Encyclopadie, and enriched the German translation of J
.
L
.
Burckhardt's Travels in See also: Syria and the See also: Holy See also: Land with valuable See also: geographical notes
.
For many years he also edited the Halle Allgemeine Litteraturzeitung
.
A sketch of his life was published anonymously in 1843 (Gesenius: eine Erinnerung furSee also: seine Freunde), and another by H
.
Gesenius, Wilhelm Gesenius, ein Erinnerungsblatt an den hundertjahrigen Geburtstag, in 1886
.
See also the article in the Allgemeine deutsche Biographie
.
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