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  1. Michael Hollerich. Download Free PDF. View PDF. Paul de Lagarde and the Relationship between Church and State Ryan Buesnel Paul de Lagarde’s work as a respected Orientalist is tempered by his notorious reputation as a committed anti-Semite who advocated for the national rebirth of a shared German self-identity.

  2. LAGARDE, PAUL DE°LAGARDE, PAUL DE ° (Paul Anton de Boetticher ; 1827–1891), German Protestant Orientalist and public intellectual. An abrasive personality, Lagarde was thwarted in his academic career and further embittered by a long wait for the professorship he finally obtained at Göttingen University in 1869.

  3. Paul Anton de Lagarde, ursprünglich Paul Anton Bötticher (* 2. November 1827 in Berlin; † 22. Dezember 1891 in Göttingen ), war als Theologe, Kulturphilosoph und Orientalist einer der prägenden deutschen Antisemiten des 19. Jahrhunderts. Seine wissenschaftliche Ambition richtete sich früh auf die Erschließung der Septuaginta nach der ...

  4. Paul Anton de Lagarde (2. listopadu 1827 Berlín - 22. prosince 1891 Göttingen) byl německý biblista a orientalista. Patřil ke skupině pruských konzervativců . Byl zarytým antisemitou , což se odrazilo i v jeho nacionálně orientované práci Deutsche Schriften (1878-81).

  5. Lagarde studied Coptic with Moritz Gotthilf Schwartze (1802–1848), one of the pioneers of Coptic Studies in Germany.2 While a student with Schwartze and influenced by him, Lagarde * Paul de Lagarde’s correspondence, which is at the basis of this article, is kept in the Department ‘Handschriften und seltene Drucke’ (Manuscripts and Rare Prints) of the Niedersächsische Staats- und ...

  6. German Orientalist; born in Berlin Nov. 2, 1827; died in Göttingen Dec. 22, 1891. His father was Wilhelm Bötticher; and his earlier writings (1847-52) were published under the name "P. A. Bötticher," the name De Lagarde, which was in his mother's family, being legally assumed by him in 1854, when he was adopted by his maternal great-aunt ...

  7. Lagarde (1827-1891), a renowned Orientalist at the University of Göttingen, was a bitter critic of modernism and liberalism with which he identified contemporary Jews. In countless articles and two volumes of essays, "Deutsche Schriften", he advocated a vague "national religion", in which Jews had no place.