German linguist (1844–1918)
Ernst Wilhelm Oskar Windisch (4 September 1844, Dresden – 30 October 1918, Leipzig ) was a German classical philologist and comparative linguist who specialised in Sanskrit , Celtic and Indo-European studies .
In his student days at the University of Leipzig , he became friends with Friedrich Nietzsche . One of his teachers was Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl . In 1867 he obtained his PhD in classical philology , afterwards teaching at the Thomasschule of Leipzig (1867–1870). In the meantime, he completed his habilitation in Sanskrit and comparative linguistics at the university (1869).[ 1]
In 1870–71 he worked as a staff member of the India Office Library in London . Later on, he became a professor of comparative linguistics at Heidelberg University (1872) and the University of Strasbourg (1875). In 1877 he returned to his alma mater in Leipzig as a professor of Sanskrit and director of the Indo-Europeanist institute. In the academic year of 1895/96, he served as rector . Among his students were Friedrich Delitzsch as well as Anna Leonowens who attended his Sanskrit lectures from 1897 to 1901.[ 2] In 1883 he was appointed a full member of the Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig (Royal Saxon Society of Sciences in Leipzig). He became a corresponding member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities in 1905.[ 1] In the same year, Windisch published his translation of the Old Irish epic Táin Bó Cúailnge into German.
In 1873 he married Berta Roscher, daughter of economist Wilhelm Roscher .[ 1] The couple had five children, including the theologian Hans Windisch [de ] (1881–1935).
Works
"Compendium of Irish Grammar" (1883 English translation).
Zwölf Hymnen des Rigveda, mit Sayana's Commentar (1883)
Māra und Buddha , Leipzig 1895.
Buddhas Geburt und die Lehre von der Seelenwanderung , Leipzig 1908 – Buddha's birth and the doctrine of the transmigration of souls .
Iti-Vuttaka , editor
Das keltische Britannien bis zu Kaiser Arthur , Leipzig 1912 – Celtic Britain up to the time of King Arthur .
Festschrift (1914).
Geschichte der Sanskrit-Philologie und indischen Altertumskunde , 2 vols, Leipzig 1917–1920 – History of Sanskrit philology and Indian archaeology.[ 1]
Kleine Schriften (2001) edited by Karin Steiner and Jörg Gengnagel.
External links
References
^ a b c d Catalogus Professorum lipsiensium biographical sketch
^ Alfred Habegger (2014). Masked: The Life of Anna Leonowens, Schoolmistress at the Court of Siam . University of Wisconsin Press. p. 90.
International National Academics People Other