Edward Ullendorff
British linguist

Edward Ullendorff

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
British linguist
Gender:
Male
Birth:
25 January 1920(Berlin, Margraviate of Brandenburg; Zürich, Switzerland)
Death:
6 March 2011(Oxford, United Kingdom)
Star sign:
Education:
University of Oxford
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Biography Honours Selected works
The details
Biography

Introduction

Edward Ullendorff FBA (1920–2011) was a British scholar and historian. He was a prominent figure in Ethiopian Studies and also contributed work on the Semitic languages more generally.

Biography

Born on 25 January 1920 in Zurich, Switzerland, Ullendorff was educated at the Graues Kloster in Berlin, the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, and the University of Oxford.

Ullendorff was first lecturer, and then Reader, in Semitic Languages at the University of St Andrews (1950–1959), Professor of Semitic Languages at the University of Manchester (1959–1964). From 1964 to 1979, he was professor Ethiopic at School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), and then professor Semitic Studies from 1979 to 1982. Prior to his death in 2011, Ullendorff was Professor Emeritus at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London.

In 1971, Ullendorff served as president of the Society for Old Testament Study.

Ullendorff married Dina Noack in 1943. She provided lifelong support for his academic research and translated Melanie Oppenhejm's 'Theresienstadt' under her own name. Dina Ullendorff died in 2019.

Edward Ullendorff died on 6 March 2011.

Honours

The British Academy has established the "Edward Ullendorf Medal", so that beginning in 2012 it is "awarded annually for scholarly distinction and achievements in the field of Semitic Languages and Ethiopian Studies."

Selected works

  • Exploration and Study of Abyssinia. A Brief Survey (1945)
  • The Semitic Languages of Ethiopia. A Comparative Phonology (1955)
  • Hebraic-Jewish Elements in Abyssinian (Monophysite) Christianity (1956)
  • An Amharic Chrestomathy (1965)
  • The Challenge of Amharic (1965) An inaugural lecture delivered on 28 October 1964
  • The Ethiopians: An Introduction to Country and People (1966)
  • Ethiopia and the Bible (1968) Schweich Lectures of The British Academy (1967)
  • Is Biblical Hebrew a Language? Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 34.2:241-255 (1971)
  • Some Early Amharic letters.Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 35.2:229-270. (1972)
  • Autobiography of Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia (1978), translator
  • The Amharic Letters of Emperor Theodore of Ethiopia to Queen Victoria and Her Special Envoy (1979), with David L. Appleyard, Girma-Selassie Asfaw
  • The Hebrew Letters of Prester John (1982), with C. F. Beckingham.
  • A Tigrinya Chrestomathy (1985)
  • The Two Zions : Reminiscences of Jerusalem and Ethiopia (1989)
  • From the Bible to Enrico Cerulli A Miscellany of Ethiopian and Semitic Papers (1990)
  • From Emperor Haile Selassie to H. J. Polotsky Collected Papers IV: An Ethiopian and Semitic Miscellany (1995)