Difference between revisions of "Harry Austryn Wolfson (1887-1974), scholar"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 19: Line 19:


[[Category:Scholars|Wolfson]]
[[Category:Scholars|Wolfson]]
[[Category:Philo Scholars|1887 Wolfson]]


[[Category:American|1887 Wolfson]]
[[Category:American|1887 Wolfson]]
Line 28: Line 27:


[[Category:Lithuanian|1887 Wolfson]]
[[Category:Lithuanian|1887 Wolfson]]
[[Category:Philo Scholars|1887 Wolfson]]
[[Category:Philo Scholars--American|1887 Wolfson]]
[[Category:Philo Scholars--Jewish|1887 Wolfson]]


[[Category:Born in the 1880s| 1887 Wolfson]]
[[Category:Born in the 1880s| 1887 Wolfson]]
[[Category:Died in the 1970s| 1974 Wolfson]]
[[Category:Died in the 1970s| 1974 Wolfson]]

Revision as of 07:08, 29 October 2011

Harry Austryn Wolfson (1887-1974) was a Lithuanian-born American Jewish scholar.

Biography

Scholar, Philosopher, Historian. Born in Lithuania, moved to America in 1908. PhD (1915) at Harvard University, where he spent his entire academic career. Student and friend of George F. Moore. Professor of Hebrew literature and philosophy at Harvard. In 1925 became the first scholar in any American university to occupy a chair devoted solely to Jewish studies. Founding member and president of the American Academy for Jewish Research. Devoted his life to the study of the foundations of Jewish, Christian and Islamic philosophy, and is noted for having collapsed all the artificial barriers which isolated their study.

Works on Second Temple Judaism

Books

Select Bibliography (articles)

External links