A. E. Meeussen Explained

Achille Emile Meeussen,[1] also spelled Achiel Emiel Meeussen,[2] [3] or simply A.E. Meeussen (as he generally signed his articles) (19121978) was a distinguished Belgian specialist in Bantu languages, particularly those of the Belgian Congo, Rwanda and Burundi. Together with the British scholar Malcolm Guthrie (19031972) he is regarded as one of the two leading experts in Bantu languages in the second half of the 20th century.[4] [5]

Meeussen was born at Sint-Pieters-Jette, Belgium on April 6, 1912, and died at Louvain on February 8, 1978, at the age of 65.

Education and career

A. E. Meeussen studied classical philology at the Catholic University of Louvain (Leuven) in Belgium, where he submitted his PhD thesis on Indo-European ablaut in 1938.[6] After studying at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, in 1950 he was appointed to the staff of the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren, Belgium; he was director of the linguistics department of the museum from 195877. He was also professor of African linguistics at the University of Louvain from 1952–62 and later professor at Leiden University in the Netherlands from 196477.

Research

Languages studied

Among the Bantu languages which Meeussen described or studied were Luba-Kasayi (1951), Ombo (1952), Kirundi (1952), Laadi (1953), Bangubangu (1954), Bemba (1954), Luganda (1955), Shambala (1955), Sotho (1958), Lega (1962), Tonga (1963), and Yao (1971). His descriptions of the grammar of Ombo, Bangubangu, and Rundi were written as a result of fieldwork notes which he made on a visit to Rwanda-Urundi and Maniema district of the Belgian Congo in 1950-51; the information on Lega was obtained from visitors to the Museum.[7] He also wrote articles on other languages, including the American Indian languages Cheyenne and Cree (1962).

Tonal theory

Meeussen was especially interested in the tones of the Bantu languages, and is famous for his discovery of Meeussen's rule, which describes how in some circumstances a sequence of two High tones (HH) in a word changes to High + Low (HL). He is said to have had an exceptional ability to hear and reproduce the sounds of the languages he studied.

Historical linguistics

In addition to studying individual languages, Meeussen also made major contributions to the comparative study of Bantu and to the reconstruction of the phonemes, grammar, and vocabulary of Proto-Bantu. His 40-page article "Bantu Grammatical Reconstructions" of 1967 succinctly outlines the main facts of Proto-Bantu grammar as they were known at that time. In 1969 he was responsible for founding the database "Bantu Lexical Reconstructions" still maintained today by the Tervuren museum.[8]

Works

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Swiggers (2006)
  2. Swiggers (2009).
  3. http://hoogleraren.leidenuniv.nl/id/1686 Universiteit Leiden website
  4. Bostoen & Bastin (2016).
  5. [Thilo C. Schadeberg|Schadeberg, Thilo C.]
  6. Coupez (1979).
  7. Coupez (1980).
  8. See External links.