Francis Brown
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For the Head Master, see Geelong Church of England Grammar School.
- For the president of Dartmouth College, see Francis Brown (1784-1820).
- For the Irish Jesuit priest and photographer, see Francis Browne.
The Rev. Francis Brown (December 26, 1849 – 1916), American Semitic scholar, was born in Hanover, New Hampshire.
He was the son of Samuel Gilman Brown (1813-1885), president of Hamilton College from 1867 to 1881, and the grandson of Francis Brown, whose removal from the presidency of Dartmouth College and later restoration were incidental to the famous Dartmouth College case.
The younger Francis graduated from Dartmouth in 1870 and from the Union Theological Seminary in 1877, and then studied in Berlin. In 1879 he became instructor in biblical philology at the Union Theological Seminary, in 1881 an associate professor of the same subject, and in 1890 professor of Hebrew and cognate languages.
Dr. Brown's published works won him honorary degrees from the universities of Glasgow and Oxford, as well as from Dartmouth and Yale; they are, with the exception of The Christian Point of View (1902; with Profs. A.C. McGiffert and G.W. Knox), almost purely linguistic and lexical, and include Assyriology: its Use and Abuse in Old Testament Study (1885), and the important revision of Gesenius, undertaken with S.R. Driver and C.A. Briggs, A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament (1891-1905).
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.