Hermann Grapow Explained

Hermann Grapow
Birth Date:1 September 1885
Birth Place:Rostock
Death Place:Berlin
Fields:Egyptology
Notable Students:Fritz Hintze
Workplaces:Humboldt University of Berlin
Alma Mater:Humboldt University of Berlin

Hermann Grapow (1 September 1885 in Rostock – 24 August 1967 in Berlin)[1] was a German Egyptologist and professor who published together with Adolf Erman the Dictionary of the Egyptian Language.

He studied Egyptology at Humboldt University of Berlin under Adolf Erman. He later taught and became a professor of Egyptology at Humboldt University.[2]

Grapow joined the Nazi Party in 1937.[3]

After World War II, Grapow continued to work towards the completion of the Dictionary of the Egyptian Language. After its publication, he concentrated on studying ancient Egyptian texts that dealt with medicine.[4]

In 1947, together with Richard Hartmann and Diedrich Westermann, he founded the Institute for Oriental Research at the Berlin Academy and was appointed its director in 1956 as the successor to Richard Hartmann.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hermann Grapow . Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften . 2009-02-22 . 2012-02-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120220130543/http://aaew.bbaw.de/wbhome/com/bg/imgGrapow.html . dead .
  2. Web site: Becoming a Titan: Hermann Grapow’s Position in Egyptology and National Socialist Initiatives for the Humanities, 1938–45 . Near Eastern Languages & Cultures - UCLA . 13 April 2024.
  3. [Ernst Klee]
  4. Book: Krause . Martin . Grapow, Hermann . The Coptic Encyclopedia . Volume 4 . en.