Ursula Schattner-Rieser

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Ursula Schattner-Rieser (2019)

Ursula Schattner-Rieser (born July 12, 1966 in Brixlegg ) is an Austro-French ancient orientalist and Judaist.

Life

After graduation in Innsbruck , Ursula Schattner-Rieser studied history , ancient oriental philology , codicology , Jewish studies and ethnology in Vienna , Paris and Jerusalem from 1985 to 1992 . From 1990 to 1993 she graduated from the Ecole des langues et civilizations de l'Orient Ancien of the Theological and Religious Studies Faculty of the Institut Catholique de Paris in Hebrew , Aramaic , Akkadian , Syriac , Ethiopian , Arabic and Greek . After completing her master's degree (1991) in Hebrew studies at the University of Paris VIII, she graduated in Samaritan studies from the École pratique des hautes études (EPHE) Sorbonne in 1992 , where she earned her doctorate in 1998 on the manuscripts from the Dead Sea “summa cum laude” as “Docteur ès Sciences historiques et philologiques “(Oriental Studies and Biblical-Semitic Philology - Qumran Texts) followed. It was there that followed in 2001 the historical-philological diploma “élève de l'Ecole” and the granting of the license to teach as a university lecturer for ancient oriental studies (Langues et Littératures Orientales) and Jewish studies.

She was a university professor in Paris for Hebrew-Aramaic philology (1996-2011) at the École des Langues et Civilizations de l'Orient Ancien (ELCOA) of the Institut Catholique de Paris and at the chair of André Lemaire at the EPHE-Sorbonne and a private lecturer in the course Ancient Judaism at the University of Zurich (2010–2013) and at the Institute for Biblical Studies and the Ancient Near East at the University of Innsbruck (2012–2016) as well as at the theological faculty of the University of Salzburg .

She was a research assistant with Andreas Lehnardt , professor for Jewish studies at the University of Mainz (2016–2017) and at the University of Innsbruck (2012–2016) to research medieval Jewish fragments in book covers in archives and libraries in Tyrol and South Tyrol for the Institute for Jewish History in Austria (INJOEST) and hebraica.at.

Since April 1, 2018, Ursula Schattner-Rieser has been the deputy chair and head of the institute. i. of the Martin Buber Institute for Jewish Studies at the University of Cologne .

Since 2005 she has been a corresponding member of the Académie nationale de Metz .

Scientific work

Her research interests and focus are on Qumran studies and the exploration of the Dead Sea manuscripts , post-exilic biblical studies , the environment of the Old Testament and Samaritan studies and the medieval Hebraica fragments in book covers.

For Semitic studies , there are Hebrew and Aramaic linguistics, ancient Judaism and early and early Christianity as well as comparative religious studies . Her personal interest lies in the interreligious cultural exchange between Judaism, Christianity and Islam .

Ursula Schattner-Rieser is networked on a subject-specific basis. This includes joint work and publications on the Samaritans with Jörg Frey , Konrad Schmid (theologian) and Christian B. Amphoux and collaborations with Jörg Frey, Emanuel Tov , Daniel Stökl Ben Ezra , Katell Berthelot and Daniel Smith on the manuscripts from the Dead Sea, Qumran , Prayers and Aramaic in the time of Jesus.

Ursula Schattner-Rieser's work on the Lord's Prayer has met with great scientific approval . Based on the Aramaic texts from Qumran "the Central Aramaic -Palestinian phase", she made a new back-translation or reconstruction of the original Aramaic prayer, which differs in a number of details from the widespread retroversions by Kuhn and Jeremias.

Publications (selection)

Monographs
  • L'Araméen des manuscrits de la mer Morte, I. Grammaire (= Instruments pour l'étude des langues de l'Orient ancien 5), Editions du Zèbre, Lausanne 2004, ISBN 2940351031
  • Textes araméens de la mer Morte. Édition bilingue, vocalisée et commentée (= Langues et cultures anciennes 5), Éditions Safran, Bruxelles 2005, ISBN 287457001X
  • Échos du passé araméen. Témoignages épigraphiques par rapport à la tradition hébraïque et juive . Paris 2010 (= habilitation thesis).
Editing

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ecole des Langues Orientales Anciennes de l'Institut Catholique de Paris
  2. Study course Ancient Judaism at the University of Zurich
  3. University of Innsbruck - Dr. Ursula Schattner-Rieser
  4. ^ INJOEST - Institute for Jewish History in Austria
  5. ^ Hebrew fragments in Austria
  6. ^ Martin Buber Institute for Jewish Studies .
  7. ^ Books within books
  8. ^ Huron University Daniel A Smith
  9. Jörg Frey : The Lord's Prayer on the horizon of ancient Jewish prayer with special consideration of the text finds from the Dead Sea. In: The Lord's Prayer in its ancient contexts. Florian Wilk (ed.), Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2016, ISBN 978-3-525-54052-7 .
  10. ^ Karl Georg Kuhn , Eighteen Prayer and Our Father and the Rhyme, Scientific Investigations for the New Testament 1, Tübingen 1950, 32f.
  11. Joachim Jeremias : Our Father in the Light of Newer Research, Calwer Verlag 1962.
  12. Ursula Schattner-Rieser: Abba. Our Father: The Lord's Prayer in the Context of Jewish-Aramaic Prayer Traditions in the Time of Jesus . In: Prayer in the Sayings Gospel Q [Das Gebet in der Logienquelle Q.], ed. By Daniel A. Smith & Christoph Heil, WUNT, Tübingen, Mohr-Siebeck, 2019, p. 23-56, ISBN 978-3-16-156660-8 .