Berthold Delbrück

German comparative linguist and Sanskrit scholar
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroGerman comparative linguist and Sanskrit scholar
PlacesGermany
wasLinguist Professor Educator
Work fieldAcademia Literature Social science
Gender
Male
Birth26 July 1842, Putbus, Germany
Death3 January 1922Jena, Germany (aged 79 years)
Star signLeo
Education
University of Halle-Wittenberg
Humboldt University of Berlin
The details

Biography

Berthold Gustav Gottlieb Delbrück (26 July 1842 – 3 January 1922) was a German linguist who devoted himself to the study of the comparative syntax of the Indo-European languages.

Biography

Delbrück was born in Putbus. He studied at the universities of Halle and Berlin, receiving his doctorate at Halle in 1863. In 1870 he succeeded August Leskien as an associate professor at the University of Jena, where in 1873 he was named a full professor of Sanskrit and comparative linguistics.

In 1871 he published a study of the subjunctive and optative moods in Sanskrit and Greek, which was the first thoroughly methodical and complete treatment of a problem in comparative syntax. His great achievement, however, was preparing volumes iii, iv, and v on syntax entitled Vergleichende Syntax der indogermanischen Sprachen in Grundriß der vergleichenden Grammatik der indogermanischen Sprachen ("Outline of the Comparative Grammar of the Indo-Germanic Languages"), published in Strassburg between 1893 and 1900 by Delbrück and Karl Brugmann. He died in Jena, aged 79.

Works

Besides the works mentioned, he wrote:

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