Luise Abramowski

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Luise Abramowski (born July 8, 1928 in Schwentainen , Ortelsburg district , † November 3, 2014 in Tübingen ) was a German Protestant theologian and church historian .

Life

Her father was the Old Testament scholar and orientalist Rudolf Abramowski , her mother Gertrud Abramowski was also a theologian and holds a doctorate in church history. After graduation in 1946 she enrolled at the Theological Seminary in Berlin and moved to three semesters at the Faculty of Protestant Theology of the University of Bonn , where she in 1956 with the work studies the literary estate of Nestorius at Ernst Bizer doctorate. She completed her habilitation in Bonn in 1962 and was appointed lecturer in 1964, extraordinary professor in 1967 and scientific adviser in 1970. In 1974 she was appointed to the chair of historical theology in the Evangelical Theological Faculty of the University of Tübingen , where she taught until her retirement in 1995. In 1982 she was elected a corresponding member of the British Academy . Her students include Hanns Christof Brennecke and Christoph Markschies .

Your academic papers are in the University Library of Tübingen (shelf mark: Mn 55).

Works (selection)

  • Investigations on the Liber Heraclidis of Nestorius , Secrét. du Corpus SCO, Louvain 1963 (Corpus scriptorum Christianorum orientalium, volume 242).
  • (as editor, together with Alan E. Goodman): A nestorian collection of christological texts. Cambridge University Library ms. oriental 1319 , two parts, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1972 (Oriental publications, volumes 18 and 19), ISBN 0-521-07578-5 and ISBN 0-521-07578-5 .
  • Three christological investigations , de Gruyter, Berlin 1981 (Journal for New Testament Science, Supplements, Volume 45), ISBN 3-11-008500-3 .
  • Formula and Context. Studies in early Christian thought , Variorum, Hampshire 1992 (Variorium collected studies series, Volume 365), ISBN 0-86078-288-3 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Deceased Fellows. British Academy, accessed April 28, 2020 .
  2. ^ [1] Federal Archives, Central Database of Legacies. Retrieved September 11, 2019.

literature

Web links