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Edward Robinson (scholar)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edward Robinson
BornApril 10, 1794
DiedJanuary 27, 1863 (1863-01-28) (aged 68)
Alma materHamilton College
Spouse
ChildrenEdward

Edward Robinson (April 10, 1794 – January 27, 1863) was an American biblical scholar known for his magnum opus, Biblical Researches in Palestine, the first major work in biblical geography and biblical archaeology, which earned him the epithets "Father of Biblical Geography" and "Founder of Modern Palestinology."[1]

He studied in the United States and Germany, centers of biblical scholarship and exploration of the Bible as history. He translated scriptural works from classical languages as well as German translations. His Greek and English Lexicon of the New Testament (1836; last revision, 1850) became a standard authority in the United States and was reprinted several times in Great Britain.

Biography

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Robinson was born in Southington, Connecticut, and raised on a farm. His father was a minister in the Congregational Church of the town for four decades. Robinson taught at schools in East Haven and Farmington in 1810–11 to earn money for college. He attended Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, where his maternal uncle, Seth Norton, was a professor.[2] He graduated in 1816.

In 1821, he went to Andover, Massachusetts, where he published his translation of books i–ix, xviii and xix of the Iliad. There he aided Moses Stuart in the preparation of the second edition (1823) of the latter's Hebrew Grammar. He translated into English (1825) Wahl's Clavis Philologica Novi Testamenti.

Robinson went to Europe to study ancient languages, largely in Halle and Berlin (1826–30). While in Halle, in 1828 he married German writer Therese Albertine Luise von Jakob. After the couple returned to the United States, Robinson was appointed professor extraordinary of sacred literature at Andover Theological Seminary (1830–1833).[3] Robinson founded the Biblical Repository (1831), which he edited for four years.[2] In 1836, Robinson published both a translation of Wilhelm Gesenius' Hebrew Lexicon and a Greek New Testament Lexicon.

He established the Bibliotheca Sacra (1843), into which was merged the Biblical Repository. He spent three years in Boston working on a lexicon of scriptural Greek.[2] Illness caused him to move to New York City. He was appointed as professor of biblical literature at Union Theological Seminary, serving from 1837 until his death. At the Union Theological Seminary, he served as the first librarian of the Burke Library.[4]

Exploration of Palestine

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Robinson's Arch, on the south-western flank of the Temple Mount, once supported a staircase which led to the temple

Robinson traveled to Palestine in 1838 in the company of Eli Smith. He published Biblical Researches in Palestine in 1841, for which he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society in 1842.[1] He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1847.[5]

Together with Smith, Robinson made scores of identifications of ancient places referenced the Bible.[1] His work established his enduring reputation as a "founder" of biblical archaeology, and he influenced much of future archaeological field work. Examples of his finds in Jerusalem include the Siloam tunnel and Robinson's Arch in the Old City; the latter was named in his honor.

The two men returned to Ottoman Palestine in 1852 for further investigations. In 1856, the enlarged edition of Biblical Researches was published simultaneously in English and German. Among those who later acknowledged Robinson’s stature, in 1941 G. Ernest Wright, reviewing the pioneering survey contained in Nelson Glueck's The Other Side of the Jordan, makes a just comparison and fitting testimonial: "Glueck's explorations are second to none, unless it is those of Edward Robinson."[6]

Works

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Books

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Edits and translations

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Revisions

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References

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  1. ^ a b c James B. Pritchard (1958). Archeology and the Old Testament. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. pp. 57–58. LCCN 58010053.
  2. ^ a b c Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Robinson, Edward" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  3. ^ Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Robinson, Edward (scholar)" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  4. ^ Prentiss, George Lewis (1899). The Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York: Its Design and Another Decade of Its History. With a Sketch of the Life and Public Services of Charles Butler, LL.D. M., W.&C. Penny-packer.
  5. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter R" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved April 10, 2011.
  6. ^ Quoted in T.W. Davis (2004). Shifting Sands: The Rise and Fall of Biblical Archaeology, Oxford and NY: Oxford University Press. p. 102.

Further reading

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  • R. D. Hitchcock, The Life, Writings, and Character of Edward Robinson, New York, 1863.
  • "The Development of Palestine Exploration: Being the Ely Lectures for 1903", Frederick Jones Bliss. (London,1906), Lecture V "Edward Robinson" pp. 184 ff.
  • A Centennial Symposium on Edward Robinson: The Critical Faculty of Edward Robinson by W. F. Stinespring Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 58, No. 4. (Dec. 1939), pp. 379–387
  • Jay G. Williams, The Times and Life of Edward Robinson: Connecticut Yankee in King Solomons Court. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 1999.
  • Yehoshua Ben-Arieh, The Rediscovery of the Holy Land in the Nineteenth Century, Magnes Press/Hebrew University/Wayne State University Press, 1979.
  • Renaud Soler, Edward Robinson (1794–1863) et l'émergence de l'archéologie biblique, Paris: Geuthner, 2014.
  • Haim Goren, Mapping the Holy Land: the foundation of a scientific cartography of Palestine, London New York: I.B. Tauris, 2017.
  • Haim Goren, "The loss of a minute is just so much loss of life": Edward Robinson and Eli Smith in the Holy Land, Turnhout: Brepols, 2020.
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