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Hendrik Arent Hamaker was a Dutch Assyriologist, philologist and orientalist, born in Amsterdam on 25 February 1789 and died in Nederlangbroek on 7 October 1835. He studied most European and Asian languages, and the history and geography of the East. He was an associate of the orientalist Johannes Hendricus van der Palm, and Theodor Juynboll was among his pupils.

Hendrik Arent Hamaker
Born(1789 -02-25)February 25, 1789
Amsterdam, Netherlands
DiedOctober 7, 1835(1835-10-07) (aged 46)
Nederlangbroek, Netherlands
EducationAthenaeum Illustre, Amsterdam
Occupationphilologist, Orientalist
Spouse(s)Johanna Camper

Life


Hamaker's father intended him for a career in business, however his evident intelligence and keen interest in ancient languages from an early age led patrons to sponsor his education at the prestigious Atheneaeum Illustre of his native Amsterdam, to study classical and oriental languages. There, under the tutelage of professors van Lennep and Wilmett he, though far from abandoning classical languages (especially ancient and byzantine Greek), focused on oriental studies.

In 1815–1817 he was professor of Oriental languages at the Athenaeum of Franeker (formerly the University of Franeker), and lectured on Arabic, Chaldean and Syriac. From 1817–1822 he held the post of "extraordinary" professor Oriental languages and title of Interpres Legati Warneriani (Interpreter of the legacy of Levinus Warner) at Leiden University. In 1820 Hamaker published his Specimen of a catalog of oriental manuscripts of Warner's bequest, which included descriptions of the Futuh (Conquests) of Baladhuri, a section of Al-Tabari's great history, the Murudj al-Dhahab (Fields of Gold) of Al-Masudi, etc.[1] In 1822 Hamaker became full professor of Oriental languages (especially Arabic), (1822–1835).

Hamaker belonged to a number of learned institutions and, in 1829, was honored with a knighthood of the Order of the Netherlands Lion. He spent his life of forty-six years in tireless literary inquiry. Through his lectures and writings he pioneered studies of eastern literature and languages throughout Europe and beyond. Hamaker was the first Dutch scholar to give a series of eight public lectures (in 1834; published 1835) on the comparison of Greek, Latin and the Germanic languages with Sanskrit, thus instigating (though not establishing) the study of Indo-European comparative linguistics in Holland.

He died at the family's summer residence Rhodesteyn, near the village of Nederlangbroek, nine days after his wife Johanna Camper (granddaughter of Petrus Camper), on the 7th of October 1835. Like some of their seven children, both parents had contracted scarlet fever to the consequences of which both succumbed. They were buried at the churchyard of Nederlangbroek. All of the seven children survived into adulthood.


Orations



Works


Hamaker contributed to Siegenbeek's Museum and Kampen's Magazijn, and also contributed to the 2nd part of Van Kampen's Dutch translation of J. von Muller's Algemeene Geschiedenis (General History) and published reviews in the Bibliotheca Critica nova.[n 2] Among his reviews of Eastern literature, his review of a work by von Hammer, prompted a hostile reaction.

Among his treatises, works and numerous memoirs included in various collections are the following:


Notes


  1. For three mentioned speeches see The Light; the first in the Annales Academiae Groninganae, the latter in the Annales Academiae Lugduno-Batavae.
  2. Bibliotheca Critica nova,(1825) pp. 7, 339, 457
  3. History of Bonaparte in Latin verse from Claudianus; compiled by L. A. Decampo with Hamaker's Dutch translation opposite.
  4. About the Sakontala of the Indian poet Calidas in the Mnemosyne, D. XII. (Dordr 1823. 8o.)
  5. Hendrik Engelinus Weyers, 1831
  6. Genealogy of Ibn Zaydūn, Aḥmad ibn ʻAbd Allāh, (1003 or 1004-1071)

Citations


  1. Blok & Molhuysen, p. 534, Nieuw Nederlandsch biografisch woordenboek. D. 3.

Sources


Great Universal Dictionary of the Nineteenth Century


References





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