Felix Peiser Explained

Felix Ernst Peiser
Birth Date:27 July 1862
Birth Place:Berlin
Death Place:Königsberg in Preußen
Nationality:Prussian, German
Field:Assyriology
Work Institutions:University of Königsberg
Alma Mater:Friedrich Wilhelm University Berlin, Leipzig University

Felix Ernst Peiser (27 July 1862, in Berlin – 24 April 1921) was a German Assyriologist and specialist in Semitic languages.[1] [2] [3]

Life and work

Felix Peiser was born in Berlin to Jewish publisher and bookseller Wolf Peiser and his wife Rosalia Gottheil; his sister Bona was the first female librarian in Germany.[4] Peiser was a student at Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universiteit in Berlin and Leipzig University. He obtained his doctorate in 1886 at Leipzig with a dissertation on the verb in Assyrian, and his habilitation in 1890 at Silezische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universiteit in Breslau. From 1894 he taught Assyriology at Albertus-Universität Königsberg, first as Privatdozent, from 1905 as full professor.

During his early years at university, a number of important discoveries in Assyriology were made, which attracted Peiser to the field. In Berlin he studied with Eberhard Schrader, founding father of German Assyriology, in Leipzig with Assyriologist Friedrich Delitzsch and Arabist Heinrich Leberecht Fleischer. Even though the subject of his dissertation was linguistic and he was proficient in several Semitic languages (among which Hebrew and Arabic), he was most interested in historical research, just like his good friend Hugo Winckler (Assyriologist and excavator of Hattusa). Peiser published the texts from a Babylonian family archive that is kept partly in Berlin and partly in the British Museum. After his habilitation he was tasked with the publication of cuneiform judicial texts. He also published the texts of his own collection of clay tablets. His attempt to decipher the "Hittite hieroglyphs" was unsuccessful. Peiser also had an interest in the textual history of the Old Testament and published several studies on the subject.

In 1899 Peiser founded the Orientalistische Literaturzeitung, today the oldest existing scholarly journal on Ancient Near Eastern studies.[5] He was also devoted to the history of the city where he lived, Königsberg in Preußen. From 1916 he was president of the important local history society Altertumsgesellschaft Prussia.

After his death, Peiser's collection of cuneiform tablets was bought by Franz Böhl, then professor in Groningen; it formed the start of the Böhl Collection, today the largest collection of cuneiform texts in the Netherlands.

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. G. Bergsträßer, Felix Peiser. In: Orientalistische Literaturzeitung, Jg. 24, Nr. 5/6 (Mai/Juni 1921), pp. 97-102 (online at Internet Archive).
  2. C. Tilitzki, Die Albertus-Universität Königsberg. Ihre Geschichte von der Reichsgründung bis zum Untergang der Provinz Ostpreussen. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-05-004312-8, p. 131f.
  3. https://portal.dnb.de/opac.htm?method=simpleSearch&query=116074086 Publications on and by Felix Ernst Peiser
  4. See article on Bona Peiser in German Wikipedia.
  5. https://www.degruyter.com/journal/key/OLZG/html Orientalistische Literaturzeitung