Maurice Bloomfield
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Most Influential Person Across History
American classical philologist
Maurice Bloomfield's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Maurice Bloomfieldliterature Degrees
Literature
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Classical Studies
#191
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Literature
Maurice Bloomfield's Degrees
- PhD Sanskrit Johns Hopkins University
Why Is Maurice Bloomfield Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Maurice Bloomfield, Ph.D., LL.D. was an Austrian Empire-born American philologist and Sanskrit scholar. Biography He was born Maurice Blumenfeld in Bielitz , in what was at that time Austrian Silesia to Jewish parents. His sister was Fannie Bloomfield Zeisler, and the linguist Leonard Bloomfield was his nephew. He married Rosa Zeisler in 1885, and had a son and a daughter; Rosa died in 1920. In 1921, he married Helen Scott.
Maurice Bloomfield's Published Works
Published Works
- On Assimilation and Adaptation in Congeneric Classes of Words (26)
- The marine Tertiary stratigraphy of the North Pacific Coast of America . The nomenclature of minerals . The character and adventures of Muladeva (15)
- On False Ascetics and Nuns in Hindu Fiction (11)
- The Religion of the Veda: The Ancient Religion of India, from Rig-Veda to Upanishads (11)
- Cerberus The Dog of Hades (7)
- On the Probability of the Existence of Phonetic Law (4)
- Vedic Variants: A Study of the Variant Readings in the Repeated Mantras of the Veda. Volume 1: The Verb (4)
- The Fable of the Crow and the Palm-Tree: A Psychic Motif in Hindu Fiction (4)
- The Dohada or Craving of Pregnant Women: A Motif of Hindu Fiction (4)
- On Recurring Psychic Motifs in Hindu Fiction, and the Laugh and Cry Motif (4)
- On Organized Brigandage in Hindu Fiction (3)
- The Home of the Vedic Sacrifice (2)
- On Overhearing as a Motif of Hindu Fiction (2)
- Contributions to the Interpretation of the Veda: Fourth Series (2)
- The Śālibhadra Carita: A Story of Conversion to Jaina Monkhood@@@The Salibhadra Carita: A Story of Conversion to Jaina Monkhood (2)
- The Art of Stealing in Hindu Fiction (2)
- The Art of Stealing in Hindu Fiction: Part II (2)
- The Kāuçika-Sūtra of the Atharva-Veda@@@The Kaucika-Sutra of the Atharva-Veda (2)
- Joseph and Potiphar in Hindu Fiction (2)
- Notes on the Divyāvadāna@@@Notes on the Divyavadana (1)
- Some Rig-Veda Repetitions (1)
- The Essentials of Buddhist Doctrine and Ethics (1892) (1)
- On certain irregular Vedic subjunctives and imperatives (1)
- Some Cruces in Vedic Text, Grammar, and Interpretation (1)
- Final as before Sonants in Sanskrit (1)
- Fifty Years of Comparative Philology in America (1)
- On Some Alleged Indo-European Languages in Cuneiform Character (1)
- Indo-European ozdos, Greek ὄζος, Germanic asts, etc.@@@Indo-European ozdos, Greek ozos, Germanic asts, etc. (1927) (0)
- On some disguised forms of Sanskritpaçucattle. (1909) (0)
- The Meaning and Etymology of the Vedic Word vidátha@@@The Meaning and Etymology of the Vedic Word vidatha (0)
- The Mind as Wish-Car in the Veda (0)
- On the so-called root-determinatives in the Indo-European languages. (0)
- On the Etymology and Meaning of the Sanskrit Root Varj (0)
- On Vedic Dhénā, "Prayer," "Song"@@@On Vedic Dhena, "Prayer," "Song" (0)
- Indo-European Notes (0)
- The Etymology of Presbus (0)
- Seven Emendations of the Text of the Rig Veda (0)
- On ṛcīṣama, an Epithet of Indra@@@On rcisama, an Epithet of Indra (0)
- Vedic Variants. Volume III: Noun and Pronoun Inflection (1935) (0)
- The Myth of Purūravas, Urvaçī, and Âyu@@@The Myth of Pururavas, Urvaci, and Ayu (0)
- Additional Note and Corrections to the Article Entitled 'The Origin of the Recessive Accent in Greek (0)
- On the Wedding Stanza, Rig-Veda, x. 40. 10 (0)
- On the position of the Vāitāna-sūtra in the literature of the Atharva-Veda (0)
- Four Etymological Notes (0)
- On Professor Streitberg's Theory as to the Origin of Certain Indo-European Long Vowels (0)
- Corrections and Conjectural Emendations of Vedic Texts (0)
- The Cambridge History of India. In six volumes. Volume I. Ancient India. Edited by E. J. Rapson, M.A., Professor of Sanskrit in the University of Cambridge. (Cambridge: University Press; New York: Macmillan Company. 1922. Pp. xxiv, 736. Plates. 42 s.) (1923) (0)
- On the relative chronology of the Vedic hymns ; On ṛcīṣama, an epithet of India (0)
- Contributions to the exegesis of the Atharva-veda (0)
- Vedic variants. Verbs (0)
- On ṛcīṣama, an epithet of Indra (0)
- On a Case of Suppletive Indo-European Suffixes (1925) (0)
- On Certain Work in Continuance of the Vedic Concordance (0)
- The Position of the Gopatha-Brāhmaṇa in Vedic Literature@@@The Position of the Gopatha-Brahmana in Vedic Literature (0)
- On the variable position of the finite verb in oldest Sanskrit (1913) (0)
- On a Possible Pre-Vedic Form in Pāli and Prākrit@@@On a Possible Pre-Vedic Form in Pali and Prakrit (0)
- The 'Ablaut' of Greek Roots Which Show Variation between e and o (0)
- A Proposed Photographic Reproduction of the Tuebingen Manuscript of the Kashmirian Atharva-Veda, the So-Called Pāippalāda-Cākhā@@@A Proposed Photographic Reproduction of the Tuebingen Manuscript of the Kashmirian Atharva-Veda, the So-Called Paippalada-Cakha (0)
- On the Rev. L. F. Mills' Edition of the Gathas (0)
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