Pieter Boeles Explained

Pieter Boeles
Birth Date:4 March 1795
Birth Place:Ferwerd, Netherlands
Death Place:Groningen, Netherlands
Birthname:Pijtter Boeles
Nationality:Dutch
Occupation:Minister

Pijtter (Pieter) Boeles (1795–1875) was a Dutch Minister and linguist.[1]

Biography

Boeles, son of the Frisian farmers Jetzo Boeles and Trijntje Pieters, studied theology at the University of Groningen. He completed his major in 1817 with a dissertation, which was published by J. Oomkens Groningen. In the same year he married Alberdina Janna Speckman of Eelde. He was minister of Pingjum, Noordlaren and Noorddijk successively. For the greatest part of his career, from 1827 to 1870, he was last minister of the Reformed Stephanuskerk. He was also a member of the provincial church government, president of the classical association of Groningen and member of the college of supervision of the ecclesiastical administration of Reformed Church in the Groningen Province. In 1853 he was chairman of the national synod of the Reformed Church.[2]

Boeles published ten articles for his pastorate about various affairs, including the fields of religion, religious education, church polity and history. He then wrote the first dictionary of the Gronings dialect, the Idioticon Groninganum: vergelijkend woordenboek van den Groningschen tongval (Idioticon Groninganum: comparative dictionary of the Gronings dialect). This unpublished manuscript was recovered by the professor of Groninger language and culture Siemon Reker in the nineties of the 20th century and appeared in print in 1997.[3] [4]

In 1850 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Groningen[5] [6] and during his fiftieth year of his pastorate on November 24, 1867, he became a knight in the Order of the Netherlands Lion.[7]

Pieter Boeles died in 1875 in Groningen at the age of eighty. His son Willem Boele Sophius Boeles was president of the court in Leeuwarden [8]

Boeles was buried in the cemetery at the Reformed Stephanuskerk in Noorddijk

Notes and References

  1. Digital Library of Dutch Letters http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/bran038biog01_01/bran038biog01_01_0410.htm en http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/molh003nieu07_01/molh003nieu07_01_0260.htm
  2. Web site: Garmer and Thesinger Express d.d. October 1999 . 2020-05-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20041223223557/http://www.garmerwolde.net/g%26t/Jaargang25/G%26Toktober1999/G%26Toktober1999.htm . 2004-12-23 . dead .
  3. E. Hoekstra & H. Scholtmeijer in: Driemaandelijkse Bladen 49, 153-157. (1997) http://members.chello.nl/e.hoekstra8/79RecReker.html
  4. Fryske Akademy Woordenaar mei 1997
  5. Nieuwsblad van het Noorden d.d. March 7th 1997 Friese dominee schreef eerste Groninger woordenboek
  6. http://resolver.kb.nl/resolve?urn=ddd:010080277:mpeg21:a0012 Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant d.d. 6 juni 1850
  7. http://resolver.kb.nl/resolve?urn=ddd:000018974:mpeg21:a0016 Provinciale Overijsselsche en Zwolsche courant d.d. December 2nd 1867
  8. The memory of the Netherlands: W.B.S.Boeles