Müller studied at the University of Copenhagen, where he passed his theological examination in 1791. After spending some time at various German universities, he visited France and England. Returning to Denmark, he wrote numerous works and was appointed professor of theology at the University of Copenhagen in 1801. During his time as a professor, he produced a large number of essays and books about theology, history, and linguistics. As a result of the fame these works earned him, he was appointed a member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters in 1811 and joined the Arnamagnæan Institute in 1815.[2]
Following the death of Friedrich Münter in 1830, he was appointed the Bishop of Zealand, the highest ecclesiastical dignity in Denmark at the time. He held the position for only four years, as Müller died in 1834 after a long period of illness.
Works
In his time as a professor of theology, Müller wrote a variety of essays which, though many were intended as instructional materials for his students, gained him acclaim as a theologian. He also wrote academically about history and linguistics. The most notable of these works include:
De hierarchia et studio vitæ asceticæ in sacris et mysteriis Græcorum Romanorumqve latentibus (1803)
Kristeligt Moralsystem (1808)
Kristelig Apologetik (1810)
Om Kilderne til Saxos 9 første bøger og deres Troværdighed (1823)
System i den kristelige Dogmatik (1826)
Dansk Synonymik eller forklaring af enstydige danske Ord (1829)
In the academic world, Müller was perhaps best known for his study of the nordic sagas. His works concerning nordic mythology include:
Antikvarisk Undersøgelse over de ved Gallehus fundne Guldhorn (1806)
Sagabibliothek (three volumes, 1810–1818)
Om Avthentien af Snorres Edda og beviset derfra kan hentes for Asalærens Ægthed (1812).
Om det islandske Sprogs Vigtighed (1813)
Undersøgelse om Kilderne til Snorros Heimskringla og disses Troværdighed (1820)
Kritisk Undersögelse af Danmarks og Norges Sagnhistorie (1823–1830)
Müller also authored two biographies:
Vita Andreæ Sunonis, archiepiscopi Lundensis (1830)
Vita Lagonis Urne, episcopi Roskildensis (1831)
Personal life and family
Müller was born in Copenhagen to Frederik Adam Müller (1725–1795) and Marthe Sophie Garboe. His mother died in 1780, when Peter Erasmus was only four years old. Because his father was a renowned collector of copper engravings, chalcography, and books, Münter had access to a wide breath of knowledge. He had been taught by private tutors and had a relatively isolated childhood as a result.[3] His brother, Adam Gottlob Müller (1769–1833), was a member of the Danish Supreme Court.[4]
In 1805, he married Louise Augusta Stub (1778–1852), the granddaughter of Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein. The couple had three sons and a daughter. Their first son, Otto Frederik Müller (1807–1882) became a member of the Supreme Court and was the father of Peter Lange-Müller. Their second son, Carl Ludvig Müller (1809–1891), was a numismatist and the father of Sophus Müller.[5][6] The couple's youngest son, Adam August Müller, was a renowned painter.[7]
References
^Bricka, Carl Frederik (1897). Dansk biografisk Lexikon (in Danish). Vol. XI: Maar-Müllner. Copenhagen: Gyldendalske Boghandels Forlag. pp. 602–606.
^Jensen, Erik Lund (2011-07-18). "Peter Erasmus Müller". Dansk Biografisk Leksikon (in Danish). Retrieved 2020-07-28.
^Bricka, Carl Frederik (1897). Dansk biografisk Lexikon (in Danish). Vol. XI: Maar-Müllner. Copenhagen: Gyldendalske Boghandels Forlag. pp. 567–568.
^Bricka, Carl Frederik (1897). Dansk biografisk Lexikon (in Danish). Vol. XI: Maar-Müllner. Copenhagen: Gyldendalske Boghandels Forlag. pp. 568–572.
^Blangstrup, Christian (1924). Salmonsens konversationsleksikon (in Danish). Vol. XVII: Mielck-Nordland (2nd ed.). Copenhagen: A/S J. H. Schultz Forlagsboghande. p. 494.
^Bricka, Carl Frederik (1897). Dansk biografisk Lexikon (in Danish). Vol. XI: Maar-Müllner. Copenhagen: Gyldendalske Boghandels Forlag. pp. 565–567.