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Martin Hartmann

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German orientalist (1851–1918)
Martin Hartmann

Martin Hartmann (9 December 1851, Breslau – 5 December 1918, Berlin) was a German orientalist, who specialized in Islamic studies.

In 1875, he received his doctorate at the University of Leipzig as a student of Heinrich Leberecht Fleischer. From 1876 to 1887 he served as a dragoman at the German General Consulate in Beirut. From 1887 until his death in 1918 he taught classes at the Department of Oriental Languages in Berlin.

As a professor in Berlin he strove hard for the recognition of Islamic studies as an independent discipline. His numerous contributions to the field of Islamic studies were based on a sociological standpoint. Many of these works were published in the journal "Die Welt des Islams" (The World of Islam), a publication of the "Deutsche Gesellschaft für Islamkunde", an organization that Hartmann was a co-founder of in 1912.

The Arab author Shakib Arslan strongly criticized and pushed back against Hartmann for his views on Islam and his writings on the Muslims of China.

Selected works

References

  1. ^ Hartmann, Martin in: Neue Deutsche Biographie 7 (1966), S. 745 f.
  2. German Orientalism: The Study of the Middle East and Islam from 1800 to 1945 by Ursula Wokoeck
  3. شكيب, ارسلان (1932). حاضر العالم الاسلامي 2 (in Arabic). القاهرة: مطبعة عيسى البابي الحلبي. pp. 242–243.
  4. Most widely held works about Martin Hartmann WorldCat Identities



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