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The Curious Case of Ethiopic Chaldean: Fraud, Philology, and Cultural (Mis)Understanding in European Conceptions of Ethiopia
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Citations
6
References
2015
Year
African LiteratureReligious SymbolLinguistic AnthropologySemitic LanguageEthnohistoryEthiopic ChaldeanAfrican DiasporaReligious PluralismInterfaithCultural StudiesSocial SciencesCurious CaseAfrican HistoryHistorical LinguisticsReligious SystemsMiddle Eastern StudiesCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesLanguage PromotionClassicsVatican Library PersonnelBiblical StudyDiaspora StudyAfrican StudiesAfrican HumanitiesAnthropologyComparative ReligionIntriguing MysteryCultural AnthropologyEuropean Conceptions
Abstract An intriguing mystery in early modern intellectual history is how and why European scholars came to designate Ethiopic, the sacred language of Ethiopia, as Chaldean. This article locates the designation’s origins in a deduction made by Vatican library personnel, partially inspired by a hoax perpetrated a quarter-century earlier. It then traces the influence of this designation on the progress of historical linguistics, where theories defending the appellation of Ethiopic as Chaldean, although often erroneous, nevertheless contributed to the accurate categorization of Ethiopic as a Semitic language, and on attitudes to Ethiopian Christianity that played a role in Catholic-Protestant polemic.
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