Christopher Johnston (Assyriologist) Explained

Christopher Johnston
Birth Date:8 December 1856
Birth Place:Baltimore, Maryland
Death Place:Baltimore, Maryland
Occupation:Physician, Assyriologist
Children:2
Signature:Signature of Christopher Johnston (1856–1914).png

Christopher Johnston (December 8, 1856 – June 26, 1914) was an American physician and Assyriologist, a scholar of ancient Mesopotamia.

Personal life

He was born on December 8, 1856, in Baltimore, the son of the physician Christopher Johnston (1822-1891), a professor of surgery at the University of Maryland and the discoverer of Johnston's organ, and Sarah Lucretia Clay (1835-1879). Johnston married Madeline T. Tilghman on June 2, 1897, and had a son, Benamin Johnston, and a daughter, Eliza Gates Johnston, who died young.[1]

Johnston died at his home in Baltimore on June 26, 1914.

Studies and career

Johnston studied at the University of Virginia, where he earned three degrees: a B. Litt. in 1876, a B.A. 1878, and an M.A. in 1879. He graduated from the medical department of the University of Maryland in 1880, practiced medicine until 1888 in Baltimore (while concurrently studying various languages), then entered Johns Hopkins to study Assyriology and Semitics, taking the degree of Ph.D. in 1894. Johnston continued on to become a Professor of Oriental History and Archaeology at Hopkins. He published Epistolary Literature of the Assyrians and Babylonians (1896) and edited Ancient Empires of the East (1906). He was also responsible for writing the New International Encyclopedia chapter concerning Egyptology.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Book: Men of Mark in Maryland . II . Bernard Christian . Steiner . B. F. Johnson, Inc. . 75, 79 . 1910 . 2023-06-25 . Google Books.