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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Persondata
NAME Menant, Joachim
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION French linguist
DATE OF BIRTH April 16, 1820
PLACE OF BIRTH Cherbourg
DATE OF DEATH August 30, 1899
PLACE OF DEATH Paris
Languages