Charles Pierre Henri Rieu

Charles Pierre Henri Rieu (June 8, 1820 March 19, 1902) was a Swiss Orientalist, for many years Professor of Arabic in London and Cambridge.

Biography

Rieu was born in Geneva, and studied at Bonn University, where he studied Arabic under Georg Freytag and Johann Gildemeister, and Sanskrit with Christian Lassen. He received his doctorate in 1843. He entered the British Museum in 1847, and after twenty years of service, a new post, that of Keeper of Oriental Manuscripts, was created for him.

He was a Professor of Arabic and Persian at University College London.[1] In 1895 he was made professor of Arabic in the University of Cambridge, with the full title 'Sir Thomas Adams Professor of Arabic', in succession to Robertson Smith.[2]

Rieu died in London on 19 March 1902.[1] He was the father of E. V. Rieu.

Publications

Rieu completed in 1871 the second part, dealing with Arabic manuscripts, of the Catalogus codicum manuscriptorum orientalium, which had been begun by William Cureton, and he issued a supplementary volume in 1894.

He also drew up a Catalogue of the Turkish Manuscripts (1888) and a Catalogue of the Persian Manuscripts (4 vols, 1879–95),[3] the latter being a storehouse of information on the books and their authors.

gollark: I should run some more training of that, actually.
gollark: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1OL0D5ujUX3Eyd3xcSbeXaEWe0nRmT5U1?usp=sharing↑ GPT-2 instance trained on my Discord messages
gollark: Anyway, thanks to bizarre Google projects, people who actually know what they're doing, and Python, you can quite easily train GPT-2s on arbitrary collections of data and achieve reasonable quality.
gollark: Added to your psychological profile.
gollark: GPT-2 is a something something transformers something something 117 million parameters something something natural language processing something something deep learning.

References

  1. "Obituary". The Times (36721). London. 21 March 1902. p. 3.
  2. "Rieu, Charle Pierre Henri (R894CP)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. Catalogue of the Persian manuscripts in the British museum (1879)


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