Difference between revisions of "Millar Burrows (1889-1980), American scholar"

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==Biography==
==Biography==
Borni in Cincinnati, OH. Student at Cornell University and the Union Theological Seminary. Ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in 1915. PhD (1925) at Yale University. Taught at Brown University (1925-1950) and Yale University (1950-1958). Director if the American School of Oriental research in Jerusalem in 1931-32 and again 1947-48. Among the very first scholars to study the Dead Sea Scrolls.  
 
American biblical scholar.  Millar Burrows (1889-1980) was born in Cincinnati on October 26, 1889. A Presbyterian minister, Burrows was educated at Cornell and Union Theological Seminary (MDiv). After ministering in Texas and teaching at Tusculum College in Tennessee, Burrows earned his Ph.D. from Yale (1925) and then taught at Brown as Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature and History of Religions.  Burrows left Brown in 1934 to accept a chair at Yale Divinity School as Winkley Professor of Biblical Theology.   From 1950 until 1958 Burrows served as Chairman of the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Literature at Yale Graduate School. Twice he served as the Director of the American School of Oriental Research in Jerusalem (1931-32; 1947-48). After the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1947, Burrows devoted the remainder of his life to their study and significance.  His position as Director of the American School of Oriental Research in 1948 gave him the opportunity to evaluate the scrolls at a very early date.  He published ''The Dead Sea Scrolls'' in 1955 and ''More Light on the Dead Sea Scrolls'' in 1958 and frequently lectured on their relationship to Judaism and early Christianity.  Millar Burrows died in 1980.


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

Revision as of 18:10, 25 October 2009

Millar Burrows (1889-1980) was an American scholar.

Biography

American biblical scholar. Millar Burrows (1889-1980) was born in Cincinnati on October 26, 1889. A Presbyterian minister, Burrows was educated at Cornell and Union Theological Seminary (MDiv). After ministering in Texas and teaching at Tusculum College in Tennessee, Burrows earned his Ph.D. from Yale (1925) and then taught at Brown as Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature and History of Religions. Burrows left Brown in 1934 to accept a chair at Yale Divinity School as Winkley Professor of Biblical Theology. From 1950 until 1958 Burrows served as Chairman of the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Literature at Yale Graduate School. Twice he served as the Director of the American School of Oriental Research in Jerusalem (1931-32; 1947-48). After the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1947, Burrows devoted the remainder of his life to their study and significance. His position as Director of the American School of Oriental Research in 1948 gave him the opportunity to evaluate the scrolls at a very early date. He published The Dead Sea Scrolls in 1955 and More Light on the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1958 and frequently lectured on their relationship to Judaism and early Christianity. Millar Burrows died in 1980.

Works on Second Temple Judaism

Books

External links