Online Encyclopedia

SCHULTENS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 382 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SCHULTENS  , the name of three Dutch Orientalists . The first and most important,

ALBERT SCHULTENS (1686-1750), was born at
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Groningen . He studied for the church at Groningen and
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Leiden, applying himself specially to
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Hebrew and the cognate tongues . His dissertation on The Use of Arabic in the Interpretation of Scripture appeared in 1706 . After a visit to Reland in Utrecht he returned to Groningen (1708); then, having taken his degree in
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theology (1709), he again went to Leiden, and devoted himself to the study of the MS. collections there till in 1711 he became pastor at Wassenaer . Disliking parochial
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work, in 1713 he took the Hebrew chair at
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Franeker, which he held till 1729, when he was transferred to Leiden as rector of the collegium theologicum, or seminary for poor students . From 1732 till his
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death (at Leiden on the 26th of
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January 1750) he was professor of
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Oriental
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languages at Leiden . Schultens was the chief Arabic teacher of his time, and in some sense a restorer of Arabic studies, but he differed from J . J . Reiske and A . I . De Sacy in mainly regarding Arabic as a handmaid to Hebrew .

He vindicated the value of

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comparative study of the Semitic tongues against those who, like Gousset, regarded Hebrew as a sacred tongue with which comparative
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philology has nothing to do . His
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principal
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works were Origines Hebraeae (2 vols., 1724, 1738), a second edition of which, with the De defectibus linguae Hebraeae (1731), appeared in 1761;
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Job (1737) ; Proverbs (1748); Vetus et regia via hebraezandi (1738) Monumenta vetustiora Arabum (1740), &e . His son, JOHN JAMES SCHULTENS (1716-1778), became professor at Herborn in 1742, and afterwards succeeded to his
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father's chair . He was in turn succeeded by his son, HENRY ALBERT SCHULTENS (1749-1793), who, however,
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left comparatively little behind him, having succumbed to excessive work while preparing an edition of Meidani, of which only a
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part appeared posthumously (1795) .

End of Article: SCHULTENS
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HERMANN SCHULTZ (1836- )

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