Scheil, Vincent (1858-1940)

87 contributions de 1895 à 1937

Sujet de 4 publications de 1940 à 1941

Autres formes du nom
  • scheil, jean-vincent

Orientaliste. - Assyriologue. - Archéologue. - Auteur de poésies latines. - Dominicain (Source DataBNF)

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Autres données

Documents (147)

Orientaliste. - Assyriologue. - Archéologue. - Auteur de poésies latines. - Dominicain

Lieu de naissance Koenigsmacker (Moselle)
Lieu de décès Paris
Informations générales
Autres formes possibles de son nom
enfr
Jean-Vincent Scheil
Jean-Vincent Scheil
Miniature
Commentaire
enfr
Father Jean-Vincent Scheil (born 10 June 1858, Kœnigsmacker – died 21 September 1940, Paris) was a French Dominican scholar and Assyriologist. He is credited as the discoverer of the Code of Hammurabi in Persia. In 1911 he came into possession of the Scheil dynastic tablet and first translated it.After being ordained in 1887, he took courses in Egyptology and Assyriology at the École des Hautes Études, and was a student at the Collège de France, where he was a pupil of Assyriologist Julius Oppert. In 1890/91 as a member of the French Archaeological Mission of Cairo, he took part in excavations at Thebes. In 1892 he conducted excavations near Baghdad for the Ottoman Imperial Museum, followed by work in Constantinople, where he was tasked with classifying and drafting a catalog of Assyrian,
Le révérend père dominicain Jean-Vincent Scheil, né le 10 juin 1858 à Kœnigsmacker et mort le 21 septembre 1940 à Paris, est un religieux et archéologue français, célèbre pour avoir découvert et traduit les inscriptions de la stèle du Code de Hammurabi, en Iran.
Résumé
enfr
Father Jean-Vincent Scheil (born 10 June 1858, Kœnigsmacker – died 21 September 1940, Paris) was a French Dominican scholar and Assyriologist. He is credited as the discoverer of the Code of Hammurabi in Persia. In 1911 he came into possession of the Scheil dynastic tablet and first translated it.After being ordained in 1887, he took courses in Egyptology and Assyriology at the École des Hautes Études, and was a student at the Collège de France, where he was a pupil of Assyriologist Julius Oppert. In 1890/91 as a member of the French Archaeological Mission of Cairo, he took part in excavations at Thebes. In 1892 he conducted excavations near Baghdad for the Ottoman Imperial Museum, followed by work in Constantinople, where he was tasked with classifying and drafting a catalog of Assyrian, Chaldean and Egyptian antiquities of the museum. In 1895 he became a lecturer at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, where in 1908 he was named its director. In 1908 he also became a member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. In 1923 he became an officer of the Légion d'honneur. In 1901 he discovered Hammurabi's Law Code at Susa, of which, he subsequently translated and published the 250 articles of the stele containing approximately 3600 lines; La loi de Hammourabi (vers 2000 av. J.-C.), (1904).
Le révérend père dominicain Jean-Vincent Scheil, né le 10 juin 1858 à Kœnigsmacker et mort le 21 septembre 1940 à Paris, est un religieux et archéologue français, célèbre pour avoir découvert et traduit les inscriptions de la stèle du Code de Hammurabi, en Iran.