Joachim Menant

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Joachim Menant (16 April 1820-30 August 1899) was a French magistrate and orientalist

He was born at Cherbourg on the 1820. He was educated for the law, and became vice-president of the civil tribunal of Rouen in 1878, and a member of the cour d'appel three years later. But he became best known by his studies on the cuneiform inscriptions.

Among his works on the subject of Assyriology are

  • Recueil d'alphabets des écritures cunéiformes (1860)
  • Exposé des éléments de la grammaire assyrienne (1868)
  • Le Syllabaire assyrien (2 vols., 1869-1873)
  • Les Langues perdues de la Perse et de l'Assyrie (2 vols., 1885-1886)
  • Les Pierres gravées de la Haute-Asie (2 vols., 1883-1886).

He also collaborated with Julius Oppert. He was admitted to the Academy of Inscriptions in 1887, and died in Paris two years later.

His daughter Delphine (b. 1850) received a prize from the Academy for her Les Parsis, histoire des communautés zoro-astriennes de l'Inde (1898), and was sent in 1900-1901 to British India on a scientific mission, of which she published a report in 1903.

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