Difference between revisions of "Johann Benedikt Carpzov (1720-1803), scholar"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
''' Johan Benedikt Carpzov''' (1720-1803) was a German scholar.
''' Johann Benedikt Carpzov''' (1720-1803) was a German scholar, classical scholar and theologian. Member of a family of German lawyers and theologians, he was professor of philosophy at Leipzig and of poetry and Greek philology at Helmstedt, and ended his life as an abbot after having taught theology and written grammatical commentaries on the New Testament.


==Biography==
==Biography==
Classical scholar and theologian. Member of a family of German lawyers and theologians, was born in Leipzig on May 20, 1720. Was educated at the university of his native city, where he was appointed associate professor in 1747, but was called in the following year as professor of Greek to Helmstedt, and in 1757 became abbot of the nearby monastery of Königslutter. His philological learning was shown in his editions of the classics and in his ''Sacrae exercitationes in epistolam ad Hebraeos ex Philone Alexandrino'' (Helmstedt, 1750); ''Structurae theologicae in epistolam S. Pauli ad Romanos'' (1756); and ''Epistolarum catholicarum septenarius'' (Halle, 1790). His lectures, which he delivered in Latin, were devoted to classics, the New Testament, and patristics. Died at Königslutter on Apr. 18, 1803.


==Works on Second Temple Judaism==
==Works==


====Books====
====Books====
*[[Sacrae exercitationes in epistulam ad Hebraeos ex Philone Alexandrino (1750 Carpzov), book]]  
*[[Sacrae exercitationes in epistulam ad Hebraeos ex Philone Alexandrino (1750 Carpzov), book]]  
*[[Structurae theologicae in epistolam S. Pauli ad Romanos (1756 Carpzov), book]]
*[[Epistolarum catholicarum septenarius (1790 Carpzov), book]]
==Biography==
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carpzov Wikipedia.en] -- Wikipedia.de -- Wikipedia.fr -- Wikipedia.it -- Wikipedia.es
Classical scholar and theologian. Member of a family of German lawyers and theologians, was born in Leipzig on May 20, 1720. Was educated at the university of his native city, where he was appointed associate professor in 1747, but was called in the following year as professor of Greek to Helmstedt, and in 1757 became abbot of the nearby monastery of Königslutter. His philological learning was shown in his editions of the classics and in his ''Sacrae exercitationes in epistolam ad Hebraeos ex Philone Alexandrino'' (Helmstedt, 1750); ''Structurae theologicae in epistolam S. Pauli ad Romanos'' (1756); and ''Epistolarum catholicarum septenarius'' (Halle, 1790). His lectures, which he delivered in Latin, were devoted to classics, the New Testament, and patristics. Died at Königslutter on Apr. 18, 1803.
==References==


==External links==
*[http://www.kirchenlexikon.de/c/carpzov_j_b_iv.shtml BBKL.de]
*[http://www.kirchenlexikon.de/c/carpzov_j_b_iv.shtml BBKL.de]


[[Category:Scholars|Carpzov]]
[[Category:Scholars|Carpzov]]


[[Category:German|Carpzov]]
[[Category:German|1720 Carpzov]]
[[Category:German Scholars|1720 Carpzov]]
[[Category:German Scholars|1720 Carpzov]]


[[Category:Born in the 1720s| 1720 Carpzov]]
[[Category:Born in the 1720s| 1720 Carpzov]]
[[Category:Died in the 1800s| 1803 Carpzov]]
[[Category:Died in the 1800s| 1803 Carpzov]]

Latest revision as of 16:15, 5 December 2013

Johann Benedikt Carpzov (1720-1803) was a German scholar, classical scholar and theologian. Member of a family of German lawyers and theologians, he was professor of philosophy at Leipzig and of poetry and Greek philology at Helmstedt, and ended his life as an abbot after having taught theology and written grammatical commentaries on the New Testament.

Biography

Works

Books

Biography

  • Wikipedia.en -- Wikipedia.de -- Wikipedia.fr -- Wikipedia.it -- Wikipedia.es

Classical scholar and theologian. Member of a family of German lawyers and theologians, was born in Leipzig on May 20, 1720. Was educated at the university of his native city, where he was appointed associate professor in 1747, but was called in the following year as professor of Greek to Helmstedt, and in 1757 became abbot of the nearby monastery of Königslutter. His philological learning was shown in his editions of the classics and in his Sacrae exercitationes in epistolam ad Hebraeos ex Philone Alexandrino (Helmstedt, 1750); Structurae theologicae in epistolam S. Pauli ad Romanos (1756); and Epistolarum catholicarum septenarius (Halle, 1790). His lectures, which he delivered in Latin, were devoted to classics, the New Testament, and patristics. Died at Königslutter on Apr. 18, 1803.

References