Rudolf Ernst Brünnow
Brünnow, Rudolf Ernst | |
---|---|
Born | Ann Arbor, Michigan | February 7, 1858
Died | Bar Harbor, Maine | April 14, 1917
Occupation | Orientalist |
Parent(s) | Franz Friedrich Ernst Brünnow |
Rudolf Ernst Brünnow (February 7, 1858 in Ann Arbor, Michigan; – April 14, 1917 in Bar Harbor, Maine) was a German-American orientalist and philologist.
Life[]
The son of the Berlin-born astronomer Franz Friedrich Ernst Brünnow, Rudolf Ernst was born during the period his father was living in the United States. In 1863 the father and son returned to Europe. In 1882 he was awarded a doctorate in philosophy at the University of Strasbourg.
In 1897 and 1898, Brünnow and Alfred von Domaszewski, took two trips together to Arabia to gain new insights into the former Roman province Arabia Petraea. They surveyed the site at Petra and made the first modern map of this former capital of the Nabatean empire.
In 1910 Brünnow was appointed the chair of Semitic Languages at Princeton. In addition to the German and English languages he mastered French, ancient Greek, Latin, Turkish and Assyrian.
Works[]
- The Kharijites Among the First Omayyads (1884) online at archive.org
- A Classified List of all Simple and Compound Cuneiform Ideographs Occurring in the Texts Hitherto Published (I-III, 1887–88)
- The Provincia Arabia on the basis of the two trips undertaken in 1897 and 1898 and the Reports of earlier travellers described, 3 vols., Strasbourg 1904–1909 (together with Alfred von Domaszewski). online at archive.org
- 'Chrestomathy from Arabic Proscript Writers' (1895) online at archive.org
- Al-Juz 'al-hadi wa-al-'ishrun min Kitab al-Aghani by Abū l-Faraj al-Isfahānī, 897 or 8-967 (1888); Leiden Matba' Brill; Contributor Robarts – University of Toronto (Arabic) archive.org
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rudolf Ernst Brünnow. |
References[]
- Rogers, Robert William (1918), Rudolph E. Brünnow; gentleman and scholar, Louisville, Ky.: Methodist Review
- 1858 births
- 1917 deaths
- Arabists
- German orientalists
- German philologists
- American orientalists
- American philologists
- Semiticists
- People from Ann Arbor, Michigan