Lobegott Friedrich Constantin von Tischendorf

Mannelijk 1815 - 1874  (59 jaar)


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  • Naam Lobegott Friedrich Constantin von Tischendorf 
    Roepnaam Constantin 
    Geboorte 18 jan 1815  Lengenfeld (D) Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatie 
    Geslacht Mannelijk 
    Recordnummer 148117 
    Overlijden 7 dec 1874  Leipzig (D) Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatie 
    Aantekeningen 
    • Certain lands which once belonged directly to the German emperor, and which, as ruled by a Voigt, or governor, in Ilis name, were called the Voigtland or Vogtland, now form parts of various sovereignties. The southwest corner of tbe present kingdom of Saxony is one of these parts, and is called the Saxon Voigtland.
      It is a hilly country, with winding, bluff-edged streams, but has also open spaces. On
      broad, gently-sloping grounds, at the moutb of the Sulz valley, stands tbe town of Lengenfeld, about fifty-five English miles south of Leipzig. At Lengenfeld, on the eighteenth of January, 1815,-tbe day named Felicitas, or happiness, in the calendar,
      - about forty days before Napoleon's return from .Elba, a child was born, who proved
      destined to lead a career more successful than that of the Corsican - a career that shed no blood and destroyed no empire. The father, a Thuringian by birth, was the physician of the town, and as well physician and apothecary for the surrounding district. The mother was a descendant of Triller, who rescued the Saxon princes Ernst and Albert, stolen from Albmburg castle by Kunz of Kauffungen, 1455 A.D.
      Lobegott Friedrich Constantin Tischendorf was the ninth child of his parents. Shortly before the birth of the eigbth child, the mother had seen a misshapen beggar; and in consequence, by the singular but not unknown effect of tbe impressions received by a woman with cbild, the infant appeared with a deformity like that of the beggar. As time of the next birth drew near, the mother saw a blind woman. Her alarm thereat, on remembering the former case, led her to pray most earnestly that the child in her womh might not at birth be found to be blind. When the new-born boy was seen to have good eyes, the mother regarded it as an answer to her prayers, and gave him, as his first name, Praise-God, or Lobegott. A further interest is lent to these cirqumstances by the fact that the child, as after life showed, had unusually good eyes, being able to see and distinguish clearly what others could no.t. It would seem as if the "direction of the intention" (not Jesuitical) of the mother to the eyes, had induced in the embryo an uncommon vigor and development in those organs.

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      Lobegott Friedrich Constantin (von) Tischendorf (January 18, 1815 – December 7, 1874) was a noted German Biblical scholar. He deciphered the Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus, a 5th century Greek manuscript of the New Testament, in the 1840s, and rediscovered the Codex Sinaiticus, a 4th century New Testament manuscript, in 1859.

      Tischendorf exemplified the buccaneer image of 19th century archaeology in his pursuit of unknown manuscripts. Alongside his industry in collecting and collating manuscripts, Tischendorf pursued a constant course of editorial labours, mainly on the New Testament, until he was broken down by overwork in 1873.

      Life
      Tischendorf was born in Lengenfeld, Saxony, near Plauen, the son of a physician. Beginning in 1834, he spent his scholarly career at the University of Leipzig where he was mainly influenced by JGB Winer, and he began to take special interest in New Testament criticism. Winer's influence gave him the desire to use the oldest manuscripts in order to compile the text of the New Testament as close to the original as possible. In 1838 he took the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, then became master at a school near Leipzig.

      After a journey through southern Germany and Switzerland, and a visit to Strassburg, he returned to Leipzig, and set to work upon a critical study of the New Testament text. In 1840 he qualified as university lecturer in theology with a dissertation on the recensions of the New Testament text — the main part of which reappeared the following year in the prolegomena to his first edition of the Greek New Testament. His critical apparatus included variant readings from earlier scholars — Elsevier, Knapp, Scholz, and as recent as Lachmann — whereby his researches were emboldened to depart from the received text as used in churches.

      These early textual studies convinced him of the absolute necessity of new and more exact collations of manuscripts. From October 1840 until January 1843 he was in Paris, busy with the treasures of the Bibliothèque Nationale, eking out his scanty means by making collations for other scholars, and producing for the publisher, Firmin Didot, several editions of the Greek New Testament — one of them exhibiting the form of the text corresponding most closely to the Vulgate. His second edition retracted the more precarious readings of the first, and included a statement of critical principles that is a landmark for evolving critical studies of Biblical texts.

      From Paris, he had paid short visits to the Netherlands (1841) and England (1842). In 1843 he visited Italy, and after a stay of thirteen months, went on to Egypt, Sinai, and the Levant, returning by Vienna and Munich. In 1844, he paid his first visit to the convent of Saint Catherine's Monastery, on Mount Sinai, where he found, in a trash basket, forty-four pages of what was the then oldest known copy of the Septuagint. The monks were using the trash to start fires, Tischendorf horrified, asked if he could have them. He deposited them at the University of Leipzig, under the title of the Codex Friderico-Augustanus, a name given in honour of his patron, Frederick Augustus II of Saxony, king of Saxony. The fragments were published in 1846 although he kept the place of discovery a secret.

      A great triumph of these laborious months was the decipherment of the palimpsest Codex Ephraemi Syri Rescriptus, of which the New Testament part was printed before he left Paris, and the Old Testament in 1845. His success in dealing with a manuscript that, having been rewritten with other works of Ephrem the Syrian, had been mostly illegible to earlier collators, made him more well known, and gained support for more extended critical expeditions. He now became professor extraordinarius at Leipzig, and married (1845). He also began to publish an account of his travels in the East (2 vols., 1845–46).

      In the winter of 1849 appeared the great work now titled Novum Testamentum Graece. Ad antiquos testes recensuit, Apparatum Criticum multis modis canons of criticism, adding examples of their application that are applicable to students today.
      These were partly the result of the tireless travels he had begun in 1839 in search of unread manuscripts of the New Testament, "to clear up in this way," he wrote, "the history of the sacred text, and to recover if possible the genuine apostolic text which is the foundation of our faith."

      In 1850 appeared his edition of the Codex Amiatinus (in 1854 corrected) and of the Septuagint version of the Old Testament (7th ed., 1887); in 1852, amongst other works, his edition of the Codex Claromontanus.

      In 1853, he made a second trip to the Syrian monastery but made no new discoveries. He returned a third time in January 1859 under the patronage of Czar Alexander II of Russia to find more of the Codex Frederico-Augustanus or similar ancient Biblical texts. On February 4, the last day of his visit, he was shown a text which he recognized as significant — the Codex Sinaiticus — a Greek manuscript of the complete New Testament and parts of the Old Testament dating to the 4th century.

      In 1859 he made a third voyage to the East. There, with the active aid of the Russian government, he at length got access to the remainder of the precious Sinaitic codex, and persuaded the monks to present it to Tsar Alexander II of Russia, at whose cost it was published in 1862 (in four folio volumes). By those ignorant of the details of his discovery of the Codex Sinaiticus, Tischendorf was accused of buying manuscripts from ignorant monastery librarians at low prices. Indeed he was never rich, but he staunchly defended the rights of the monks at St. Catherine's Monastery when he persuaded them eventually to send the manuscript to the Tsar. Even so, the monks of Mt. Sinai still display a letter from Tischendorf promising to return the manuscript to them. In 1869 the tsar awarded him the style of "von" Tischendorf as a Russian noble. Thus the Codex found its way to the Imperial Library at St. Petersburg. In 1933, the Soviet Government sold the Codex Sinaiticus for 100,000 pounds to the British Museum in London, England.

      Meanwhile, also in 1859, he had been made professor ordinarius of theology and of Biblical paleography, this latter professorship being specially created for him; and another book of travel, Aus dem heiligen Lande, appeared in 1862. Tischendorf's Eastern journeys were rich enough in other discoveries to merit the highest praise.

      Besides his fame as a scholar, he was a friend of both Robert Schumann, with whom he corresponded, and Felix Mendelssohn, who dedicated a song to him. His text critical colleague Samuel Prideaux Tregelles wrote warmly of their mutual interest in textual scholarship. His personal library, purchased after his death, eventually came to the University of Glasgow, where a commemorative exhibition of books from his library was held in 1974.

      He died in Leipzig.

      Works
      His magnum opus was the "Critical Edition of the New Testament."

      The great edition, of which the text and apparatus appeared in 1869 and 1872, was called by himself editio viii; but this number is raised to twenty or twenty-one, if mere reprints from stereotype plates and the minor editions of his great critical texts are included; posthumous prints bring the total to forty-one. Four main recensions of Tischendorf's text may be distinguished, dating respectively from his editions of 1841, 1849, 1859 (ed. vii), and 1869–72 (ed. viii). The edition of 1849 may be regarded as historically the most important, from the mass of new critical material it used; that of 1859 is distinguished from Tischendorf's other editions by coming nearer to the received text; in the eighth edition, the testimony of the Sinaitic manuscript received great (probably too great) weight. The readings of the Vatican manuscript were given with more exactness and certainty than had been possible in the earlier editions, and the editor had also the advantage of using the published labours of his colleague and friend Samuel Prideaux Tregelles.

      Of relatively lesser importance was Tischendorf's work on the Greek Old Testament. His edition of the Roman text, with the variants of the Alexandrian manuscript, the Codex Ephraemi, and the Friderico-Augustanus, was of service when it appeared in 1850, but, being stereotyped, was not greatly improved in subsequent issues. Its imperfections, even within the limited field it covers, may be judged by the aid of Eberhard Nestle's appendix to the 6th issue (1880).

      Besides this may be mentioned editions of the New Testament apocrypha, De Evangeliorum apocryphorum origine et usu (1851); Acta Apostolorum apocrypha (1851); Evangelia apocrypha (1853; 2nd ed., 1876); Apocalypses apocryphae (1866), and various minor writings, partly of an apologetic character, such as Wann wurden unsere Evangelien verfasst? (When Were Our Gospels Written?; 1865; 4th ed., 1866, digitized by Google and available for e-readers), Haben wir den echten Schrifttext der Evangelisten und Apostel? (1873), and Synopsis evangelica (7th ed., 1898).
    Persoon-ID I148117  groeneveld
    Laatst gewijzigd op 16 apr 2013 

    Gezin Maria Angelika Behme   ovl. Ja, datum echter onbekend 
    Huwelijk 18 sep 1845 
    Type: civil 
    Kinderen 
     1. Paul Andreas von Tischendorf   ovl. Ja, datum echter onbekend
     2. Johannes von Tischendorf   ovl. Ja, datum echter onbekend
     3. Immanuel von Tischendorf   ovl. Ja, datum echter onbekend
     4. Sophia Elizabeth von Tischendorf,   geb. 17 aug 1862, Leipzig (D) Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatieovl. 13 dec 1953, Hannover (D) Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatie (Leeftijd 91 jaar)
     5. Otto von Tischendorf,   geb. 2 jul 1867, Duitsland Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatieovl. 7 aug 1955, Wausau (WI, USA) Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatie (Leeftijd 88 jaar)
    Gezins-ID F1366140481  Gezinsblad  |  Familiekaart