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  1. Johann David Michaelis (27 February 1717 – 22 August 1791) was a German biblical scholar and teacher. He was member of a family that was committed to solid discipline in Hebrew and the cognate languages, which distinguished the University of Halle in the period of Pietism . [1]

  2. 18 de mar. de 2010 · Focusing on a renowned German scholar of the period, Johann David Michaelis (1717–1791) of Göttingen, this book explores the ways that critics reconceived the role of the Bible. The founders of modern biblical criticism preserved the cultural authority of the Bible, yet they did so by pushing scriptural Bibles and religious ...

    • Michael Legaspi
  3. MICHAELIS, JOHANN DAVID ° (1717–1791), German Bible scholar. Born in Halle, Michaelis was the son of the theologian and Orientalist Ch. B. Michaelis. In 1746 he was appointed professor of Oriental languages in Goettingen.

  4. MICHAELIS, JOHANN DAVID ° (1717–1791), German Bible scholar. Born in Halle, Michaelis was the son of the theologian and Orientalist Ch. B. Michaelis. In 1746 he was appointed professor of Oriental languages in Goettingen. While he was at first a pietist of the Halle school, after a stay in England (1741–42) he advocated, somewhat ...

  5. Abstract. The Göttingen professor and theologian Johann David Michaelis (1717–1791) was one of the most respected German Orientalists of the eighteenth century. In the 1750s, Michaelis planned an extensive expedition to the Near East, his primary goal being to find empirical evidence to support Biblical accounts.

  6. Johann David Michaelis (1717-91 ), the Orientalist who trained Schlozer and Eichhorn. in Gottingen, was not just the author of the standard eighteenth-century work on Jewish law, the six-volume Mosaisches Recht (Mosaic Law, 1770-. 75).

  7. JOHANN DAVID MICHAELIS. Born on 27 February 1717 in Halle/Saale Died on 22 August 1791 in Göttingen • Son of the theologian and Orientalist Christian Benedikt Michaelis • privately educated in the paternal home and the school of the Orphanage at Halle • 1733–1739 – studied theology and Oriental languages at the University of Halle