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Johann Christoph Wichmannshausen

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Fields
  
Philology Philosophy

Name
  
Johann Wichmannshausen

Doctoral advisor
  
Otto Mencke

Alma mater
  
University of Leipzig

Education
  
Leipzig University

Notable students
  
Christian August Hausen

Johann Christoph Wichmannshausen
Residence
  
Electorate of Saxony (now part of Germany)

Institutions
  
University of Wittenberg

Doctoral students
  
Christian August Hausen

Died
  
January 17, 1727, Wittenberg

Johann Christoph Wichmannshausen (1663–1727) was a 17th-century German philologist. He received his magister's degree (the highest degree of the Faculty of Philosophy, equal to the doctorates) from the University of Leipzig in 1685. His dissertation, titled Disputationem Moralem De Divortiis Secundum Jus Naturae (Moral Disputation on Divorce according to the Law of Nature), was written under the direction of his father in law and advisor Otto Mencke. He was from 1692 until the time of his death a professor of Near Eastern languages and university librarian at the University of Wittenberg, and gave courses there in Philosophy and Hebrew.

Among the books he published are De extinctione ordinis Templariorum (The extinction of the Templars), 1687 and many short works on aspects of the Old Testament.

Today, Wichmannshausen is best known as part of a line of scientific genealogy stretching from Mencke to Gauss and to many other mathematicians. As of 2015, the Mathematics Genealogy Project lists 88523 of his academic descendants.

References

Johann Christoph Wichmannshausen Wikipedia