Knowledge

Otto Pretzl

Source 📝

160: 236: 69:
exegesis (1928) and Islamic and Semitic languages (1933). In 1934 he became an associate professor at the university, attaining a full professorship during the following year. In 1937 he became a member of the
231: 197: 71: 256: 251: 190: 137: 81:
of the Quran. Pretzl listed the variants between the orthography of the Cairo text and the recommendations of Andalusian Qurʾān reciter,
183: 226: 46: 216: 221: 246: 241: 62: 78: 82: 39: 77:
In 1938 Pretzl documented the emergence of a de facto islamic canonical text, namely the
167: 159: 210: 141: 66: 123: 58: 35: 27: 23: 54: 50: 31: 237:
Academic staff of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
106:
1934; Continuation of the critical apparatus of the Koran.
171: 127:
Introduction: Qur’anic studies and its controversies
100:, 1940 – Early Islamic attributes doctrine. 49:in Rome, and in 1920 was ordained as a priest in 104:Die Fortführung des Apparatus Criticus zum Koran 232:Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich alumni 191: 8: 65:, where he later qualified as a lecturer in 88:Otto Pretzl died in a plane crash in 1941. 198: 184: 166:This article about a German academic is a 116: 16:German Arabist-orientalist (1893–1941) 7: 156: 154: 98:Die frühislamische Attributenlehre 14: 158: 30:, 28 October 1941) was a German 257:German academic biography stubs 252:German male non-fiction writers 47:Pontifical Gregorian University 144:Dictionary of German Biography 1: 170:. You can help Knowledge by 72:Bavarian Academy of Sciences 45:From 1912 he studied at the 273: 153: 53:. Afterwards, he studied 227:People from Ingolstadt 38:, who specialized in 63:University of Munich 217:German orientalists 138:Plett - Schmidseder 79:1924 Cairo edition 59:Oriental languages 26:, 20 April 1893 – 179: 178: 264: 200: 193: 186: 162: 155: 145: 135: 129: 121: 272: 271: 267: 266: 265: 263: 262: 261: 222:German Arabists 207: 206: 205: 204: 151: 149: 148: 136: 132: 122: 118: 113: 94: 83:Abu Amr al-Dani 40:Koranic studies 17: 12: 11: 5: 270: 268: 260: 259: 254: 249: 244: 239: 234: 229: 224: 219: 209: 208: 203: 202: 195: 188: 180: 177: 176: 163: 147: 146: 130: 115: 114: 112: 109: 108: 107: 101: 93: 92:Selected works 90: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 269: 258: 255: 253: 250: 248: 245: 243: 240: 238: 235: 233: 230: 228: 225: 223: 220: 218: 215: 214: 212: 201: 196: 194: 189: 187: 182: 181: 175: 173: 169: 164: 161: 157: 152: 143: 142:Walther Killy 139: 134: 131: 128: 125: 120: 117: 110: 105: 102: 99: 96: 95: 91: 89: 86: 84: 80: 75: 73: 68: 67:Old Testament 64: 60: 56: 52: 48: 43: 41: 37: 33: 29: 25: 21: 172:expanding it 165: 150: 140:/ edited by 133: 126: 124:Reynolds, GS 119: 103: 97: 87: 85:(d. 1053). 76: 44: 19: 18: 247:1941 deaths 242:1893 births 36:orientalist 20:Otto Pretzl 211:Categories 111:References 28:Sevastopol 24:Ingolstadt 55:theology 51:Freising 61:at the 32:Arabist 168:stub 57:and 74:. 213:: 42:. 199:e 192:t 185:v 174:. 34:- 22:(

Index

Ingolstadt
Sevastopol
Arabist
orientalist
Koranic studies
Pontifical Gregorian University
Freising
theology
Oriental languages
University of Munich
Old Testament
Bavarian Academy of Sciences
1924 Cairo edition
Abu Amr al-Dani
Reynolds, GS
Plett - Schmidseder
Walther Killy
Stub icon
stub
expanding it
v
t
e
Categories
German orientalists
German Arabists
People from Ingolstadt
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich alumni
Academic staff of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
1893 births

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.