LINGUIST

Hermann Möller

1850 - 1923

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Hermann Möller (13 January 1850, in Hjerpsted, Denmark – 5 October 1923, in Copenhagen) was a Danish linguist noted for his work in favor of a genetic relationship between the Indo-European and Semitic language families and his version of the laryngeal theory. Möller grew up in North Frisia after its conquest by Germany in the German–Danish War of 1864 and attended German universities (Pulsiano and Treharne 2001:447). He began teaching Germanic philology at the University of Copenhagen in 1883 and continued to do so for over thirty-five years (ib.). Also in 1883, he published Das altenglische Volksepos in der ursprünglichen strophischen Form, 'The Old English Folk Epic in the Original Strophic Form', in which he argued, among other things, that Beowulf had been composed in a fixed meter which was corrupted by later poets (ib.). Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Hermann Möller is the 154th most popular linguist (up from 165th in 2019). (up from 4,152nd in 2019)

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Among LINGUISTS

Among linguists, Hermann Möller ranks 154 out of 214Before him are Germà Colón, Mary Boyce, Alexander Veselovsky, Nurit Peled-Elhanan, Friedrich Kluge, and William Stokoe. After him are Marcus Zuerius van Boxhorn, Heinrich Schmid, Arsène Darmesteter, Alice Kober, William Dwight Whitney, and Hermann Hirt.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1850, Hermann Möller ranks 98Before him are Franziskus von Bettinger, Eduard Sievers, Hans von Berlepsch, Tomás Bretón, Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer, and Paul von Plehwe. After him are Zdenko Hans Skraup, László Lukács, Jane Ellen Harrison, Ion Andreescu, Betzy Akersloot-Berg, and Jørgen Pedersen Gram. Among people deceased in 1923, Hermann Möller ranks 97Before him are Wilhelm Killing, Manuel Allendesalazar y Muñoz de Salazar, Tage Reedtz-Thott, Tomás Bretón, Michel de Klerk, and Dmitry Anuchin. After him are Ōsugi Sakae, Georg Marco, Guy de la Chapelle, Otto Bahr Halvorsen, Eugen Huber, and Jan Kotěra.

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