Theodore Bibliander

Theodore (or Theodorus) Bibliander (German: Theodor Buchmann; 1509 in Bischofszell – 26 September 1564 in Zurich) was a Swiss orientalist, publisher, Protestant reformer and linguist. Born Theodor Buchmann (Bibliander is a Greek translation of this surname) in Bischofszell, he studied Latin under Oswald Myconius, and Greek and Hebrew under Jakob Ceporin, and attended lectures in Basel between 1525–7 given by Johannes Oecolampadius and Konrad Pelikan. He also became familiar with the Arabic language and other languages from the East; he became a professor of theology. He published a Hebrew grammar in 1535, and commentaries on the Bible. He published the first printed edition of the Qur'an in Latin (Basel, 1543), based on the medieval translation of Robert of Ketton. The edition included Doctrina Machumet, a translation of the Arabic theological tract known as the Book of a Thousand Questions. Considered the father of biblical exegesis in Switzerland, Bibliander became involved in a doctrinal controversy with Pietro Martire Vermigli (Peter Martyr) over predestination; he was removed from his theological professorship at the Carolinum academy in 1560. He died of the plague.

Theodore Bibliander

Works

  • Institutionum grammaticarum de lingua Hebraea liber unus, Zurich, 1535
  • De optimo genere grammaticorum Hebraicorum, Hieronymus Curio, Zurich, 1542
  • Machumetis Saracenorum principis eiusque successorum vitae ac doctrina ipseque Alcoran, Johannes Oporin, Basel, 1543, 1550. (Qur'an: on-line text with critical apparatus in French, on-line text with critical apparatus in German)
  • Relatio fidelis, Johannes Oporin, Basel, 1545
  • De ratione communi omnium linguarum et litterarum commentarius, Christoph Froschauer, Zurich, 1548
  • De ratione temporum, Johannes Oporin, Basel, 1551
  • Temporum a condito mundo usque ad ultimam ipsius aetatem supputatio, Johannses Oporin, Basel, 1558
gollark: It's not a risk you can choose.
gollark: You need to leave home a bit to get food and stuff. It's not a risk you *choose* if someone infects you there because they didn't want to stay at home.
gollark: I would agree with reducing lockdowns in places with very low-utilization hospitals and such. But otherwise not really.
gollark: You can *reduce* the spread...
gollark: Because you can infect other people, it's not *just* bad for you.

See also

  • Friedrich Wilhelm Bautz (1975). "Theodore Bibliander". In Bautz, Friedrich Wilhelm (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). 1. Hamm: Bautz. cols. 577–578. ISBN 3-88309-013-1.
  • Works by Theodore Bibliander at Post-Reformation Digital Library


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.