Ludovicus de Dieu, by Anthony van Zijlvelt after a portrait by Pieter Dubordieu

Louis de Dieu (7 April 1590, Flushing 23 December 1642, Leiden) was a Dutch Protestant minister and a leading orientalist.[1]

His grandfather had served at the court of Charles V, and his father, Daniel de Dieu, was also a protestant minister and linguist. Louis was educated at Leiden, where he was regent of the Walloon College (1637-42). He declined the chair of theology and oriental languages at Utrecht.[2]

Works[2]

  • Compendium Grammaticae Hebraicae et dictionnariolum praecipuarum radicum (Leiden, 1626)
  • Apocalypsis S. Joannis syriace, ex manuscripto exemplari bibliothecae Josephi Scaligeri deprompta, edita caractere syriaco et hebraeo, cum versione latina, graeco textu et notis (Leiden, 1627)
  • Grammatica trilinguis, Hebraica, Syriaca, et Chaldaica (Leiden, 1628)
  • Rudimenta linguae persicae (Leiden, 1639); a Persian grammar
  • Grammatica Linguarum Orientalium, ex recensione Dav. Clodii (Frankfurt, 1683); four grammarshebraic, syriac, chaldaic and persian.
  • Critica sacra, sive animadversiones in loca quaedam difficiliora Veteris et Novi Testam (Amsterdam, 1693); commentary on the Old Testament and the New Testament
  • Aphorismi theologici (Utrecht, 1693)
  • Traite contre l'Avarice (Deventer, 1695)

References

  1. The Correspondence of James Ussher, vol.III, pp.1177-8 (Irish Manuscripts Commission, Dublin 2015)
  2. 1 2 Nicolas 1855.

Bibliography

  • Nicolas, Michel (1855), "Louis de Dieu", Nouvelle Biographie générale (in French), vol. 14, Paris: Imprimeurs-libraires de l'institute de France, p. 158
  • Henk J. de Jonge (1975). "The Study of the New Testament in the Dutch universities 1575-1700 in Th. H. Lunsingh Scheurleer and G.H.M. Posthumus Meyjes (eds)". Leiden University in the Seventeenth Century. Leiden: 113–29.


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