Birth Date: | 15 May 1862 |
Birth Place: | Gleißenberg, Kingdom of Bavaria |
Death Place: | Wildwood, New Jersey, US |
Discipline: | Orientalist |
Sub Discipline: | Egyptology |
Wilhelm Max Müller (15 May 1862 – 12 July 1919) was a German-born American orientalist.
Müller was born at Gleißenberg, Germany. He received his higher education in Erlangen, Berlin, Munich, and Leipzig, where he received his Ph.D. He was one of the last students of the Egyptologist Georg Ebers.[1]
Müller emigrated to the United States in 1888. He was a professor at the Reformed Episcopal Seminary in Philadelphia beginning in 1890. During several years (1904, 1906, 1910), he engaged in archaeological work in Egypt for the Carnegie Institution. He lectured on Egyptology at the University of Pennsylvania and purchased papyri in Egypt for the University Museum.
He died in a drowning accident in Wildwood, New Jersey, in July 1919.
He was a contributor to the Encyclopædia Biblica and the Jewish Encyclopædia. After 1905 he served as joint editor of the Gesenius Hebrew Dictionary.
He wrote on the identification of Keftiu and concluded that it could not be Phoenicia.
On his involvement with the acquisition and early organization of the papyri and related materials in the Egyptology collection at the University of Pennsylvania Museum, see Web site: Abercrombie, John R. . A History of the acquisition of papyri and related written material in the University Museum . University of Pennsylvania .