Benno Landsberger

Benno Landsberger

Benno Landsberger (21 April 1890 – 26 April 1968) was one of the most important German Assyriologists

Early life and education

He was born in Friedek (Austrian Silesia) and from 1908 studied Oriental Studies at Leipzig. Amongst his teachers were August Fischer in Arabic and Heinrich Zimmern in Assyriology. In 1914 Landsberger joined the Austrian Army, where he fought with distinction on the Eastern Front, winning a golden Distinguished Service Cross. He returned to Leipzig after the war and was appointed to the position of 'extraordinary professor" in 1926. In 1928 he was appointed successor to Peter Jensens at Marburg, but returned to Leipzig in 1929 as Heinrich Rooms' successor.

Landsberger was dismissed as a result of the Nazi-era "Law for the Reestablishment of the Tenured Civil Service" [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gesetz_zur_Wiederherstellung_des_Berufsbeamtentums de] which excluded Jews from government employment. Landsberger accepted a post at the new Turkish University of Ankara, working especially in the area of languages, history and geography. After 1945 he was appointed to the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, where he worked until 1955. During this period he became a naturalized American citizen.

Landsberger was an eminement and groundbreaking scholar, editing many important lexical texts and conducting fundamental linguistic studies. He passed on a Germanic academic tradition that continues today in many countries via his students. He was also known for particularly black humor and a love of cigars and beer.

Works

* "The ritual calendar of Babylonia and Assyria" Leipzig 1914 (thesis) Leipzig Semitic Studies Bd 6, H, 1 February 1915
* "Assyrische Handelskolonien in Kleinasien aus dem dritten Jahrtausend" (Assyrian Commercial Colonies in Asia Minor from the Third Millennium) Leipzig 1925 (Der Alte Orient, Bd. 24. H. 4)


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Benno Landsberger — (* 21. April 1890 in Friedek, Österreichisch Schlesien; † 26. April 1968 in Chicago) war einer der bedeutendsten deutschen Assyriologen. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Werke 3 Lit …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • LANDSBERGER, BENNO — (1890–1968), Assyriologist. Landsberger was born in Frydek, then Austrian Silesia (now Czech Republic). He studied Semitic languages at the University of Leipzig (1908–13) and specialized, under H. Zimmern, in Sumerian and Akkadian. In 1920 he… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Landsberger — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Artur Landsberger (1876–1933), Jurist, Schriftsteller Benno Landsberger (1890–1968), Assyriologe Franz Landsberger (1883–1964), Kunsthistoriker Hugo Landsberger (1861–nach 1935), deutscher Schriftsteller… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Benno Orenstein — (* 2. August 1851 in Posen; † 11. April 1926 in Berlin Wannsee) war ein deutsch jüdischer Eisenbahn Industrieller und Kommerzienrat. 1876 gründete Orenstein zusammen mit dem 1885 wieder ausgeschiedenen Arthur Koppel (1851 1908) ein… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Landsberger — Lạndsberger,   Benno, Assyriologe, * Friedek 21. 4. 1890, ✝ Chicago (Illinois) 26. 4. 1968; Professor u. a. 1929 in Leipzig, nach der Emigration 1935 in Ankara, ab 1948 in Chicago; gilt als Neubegründer der altorientalischen Philologie… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • LANDSBERGER, Benno — (1890–1968)    German Assyriologist. A graduate in Oriental Studies at Leipzig, he returned there in 1926 after serving in World War I. Dismissed from his post during the Nazi era, he went first to the Turkish University of Ankara, where he… …   Historical Dictionary of Mesopotamia

  • Gulkišar — (Gul ki šár, „Zerstörer des Weltalls“; * vor 1601 v. Chr.; † um 1547 v. Chr.[1]) war der sechste Herrscher der ersten Meerland Dynastie (bala ŠEŠ.ḪA(A) (Königsliste A) oder bala ŠEŠ.kù.ki (Liste B), die im Süden Mesopotamiens herrschte. Er… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Agum-kakrime — Agum II. (mAg gu um) oder Agum II. Kakrime war der zweite kassitische König von Babylon. Von Agum II. Kakrime sind keine Originalinschriften erhalten, sondern nur spätere Kopien. Es liegen mehrere Datierungsansätze zwischen 1530 v. Chr. und 1450… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Agum II. (Karikme) — Agum II. (mAg gu um) oder Agum II. Kakrime war der zweite kassitische König von Babylon. Von Agum II. Kakrime sind keine Originalinschriften erhalten, sondern nur spätere Kopien. Es liegen mehrere Datierungsansätze zwischen 1530 v. Chr. und 1450… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Agum II. Kakrime — Agum II. (mAg gu um) oder Agum II. Kakrime war der zweite kassitische König von Babylon. Er trug den Titel šar Kaššī[1] und šar Ak ka di i [2]. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Quellen 1.1 Assurbanipal Text …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”