John Punnett Peters
John Punnett Peters (December 16, 1852 – November 10, 1921) was an American Episcopal clergyman and Orientalist.
John Punnett Peters | |
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Born | New York, New York | December 16, 1852
Died | November 10, 1921 68) New York, New York | (aged
Education | |
Occupation | Clergyman, writer |
Children |
Biography
John Punnett Peters was born in New York City on December 16, 1852.[1] He graduated from Hopkins School in 1868[2] and then from Yale in 1873. He studied at Berlin and at Leipzig. He was professor of Old Testament languages and literature at the Protestant Episcopal Divinity School in Philadelphia (1884 -91) and professor of Hebrew at the University of Pennsylvania (1885-93) and from 1888 to 1895 conducted excavations at Nippur with John Henry Haynes and Hermann Volrath Hilprecht. He became rector of St. Michael's Church, New York, in 1893, and from 1904 to 1910 he was also canon residentiary of the cathedral of St. John the Divine.
Architect Frazier Forman Peters was his son. His other son, also named John Punnett Peters (December 4, 1887 – December 29, 1955), initially described the cerebral salt-wasting syndrome.
John Punnett Peters died from a heart attack in New York on November 10, 1921.[3]
Works
- Nippur, or Explorations and Adventures on the Euphrates (two volumes, 1897)
- The Old Testament and the New Scholarship (1901)
- Early Hebrew Story: Its Historical Background (1904)
- With Hermann Thiersch, Painted tombs in the necropolis of Marissa (Marêshah) (1905)
- Annals of St. Michael's, New York, for One Hundred Years, 1807-1907 (1907)
- Modern Christianity (1909)
- Jesus Christ and the Old Commandments (1913)
- The Religion of the Hebrews (1914)
References
- Herringshaw, Thomas William, ed. (1914). Herringshaw's National Library of American Biography. IV. American Publishers Association. p. 439. Retrieved July 23, 2020 – via Google Books.
- Catalog of Trustees, Rectors, Instructors, and Alumni of Hopkins Grammar School. New Haven, CT: Dorman. 1902. p. 80.
- "Rev. J. P. Peters Dies From Heart Attack". The New York Times. November 11, 1921. p. 13. Retrieved January 4, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead. Missing or empty |title=
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