Wilhelm Max Müller

Wilhelm Max Müller ( born May 15, 1862 in Gleißenberg, † 1919) was a German -American orientalist and lexicographer. After studying in Germany, the son of the famous Indologist Friedrich Max Müller in 1888 moved to the United States. At the University of Pennsylvania, he taught Egyptology. In addition, he was a staff member and editor at the Dictionary on the Old Testament of Wilhelm Gesenius, in the Encyclopaedia Biblica and Jewish Encyclopedia. In July 1919, he died in an accident in Wildwood (New Jersey).

Works

  • Asia and Europe, according to ancient Egyptian monuments. Engelmann, Leipzig 1893
  • The love poetry of the ancient Egyptians. Hinrichs, Leipzig 1899; 2 A. ibid. 1932
  • The ancient Egyptians as a warrior and conqueror in Asia. Hinrichs, Leipzig 1903
  • Ethiopia. Hinrichs, Leipzig 1904 ( The old Orient, Volume 6, Issue 2 )
  • New representations " Mycenaean " Messenger and Phoenician ships in ancient Egyptian wall paintings. Peiser, Berlin 1904
  • The Palestine list Thutmose IV Peiser, Berlin 1907
  • The traces of Babylonian writing in Egypt. Hinrichs, Leipzig 1912
  • Egyptian Mythology. Marshall Jones (The Mythology of all Races, vol XII. ), Boston 1918; Dover, New York 2005, ISBN 0-486-43674-8
  • Orientalist
  • Lexicographer
  • University teachers ( University of Pennsylvania )
  • German
  • Americans
  • Born in 1862
  • Died in 1919
  • Man
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