Siegbert Hummel Explained

Siegbert Hummel (18 July 1908 – 28 March 2001) was a German Tibetologist and cultural historian. His work focused on the Eurasian context of Tibetan culture, the Bön religion, the Zhangzhung language, and the Gesar epic.

Biography

Born in Rodewisch, Hummel obtained his Abitur from König-Albert-Gymnasium in Leipzig in 1932. He studied theology, philosophy, psychology and history of art at the universities of Tübingen, Rostock,[1] Leipzig and Munich between 1932 and 1938.

From 1938 to 1947, Hummel worked in Leipzig and Dresden as a minister in the Lutheran church. During this time, he also studied Chinese, Japanese, Tibetan and Mongolian languages as well as ethnology and Egyptology. He became curator of the Asian department at the Ethnographic Museum of Leipzig in 1947, a job he held until 1955. In 1948, Hummel obtained his doctorate in Sinology from at the University of Leipzig.

After leaving the museum in 1955, Hummel worked as a pastor in the country parish of Plohn in Vogtland until his retirement.

He died in Röthenbach (Rodewisch) near Rodewisch.

Works of Siegbert Hummel

Chinesen," CACKlB 1975, 3-4: 28-29. .

mongolischen Völkerschaften' in einer Ausgabe durch Johann HeinrichMerck," Zentralasiatische Studien ·10: 545-550.

Arch Anz: 1-4.

jOAiW, 55: 19-20.

1988

Etruskischen als Beitrag zur linguistischen Neolith-Anthropologie Eurasiosaharaniens," Gegenb morph jb 134, 1: 53-57.

Substrat," Anthr 86: 174-184.

References

Kvaerne, Per (1997). 'A bibliography of the works of Siegbert Hummel'. The Tibet Journal 12.4: 5-22.

Notes and References

  1. See entry of Siegbert Hummel in the Rostock Matrikelportal