Sinologists
August Conrady
1864 (Wiesbaden) - 1925
Conrady's early training was in classical philology, Sanskrit, and comparative linguistics; he later moved into Tibetan, and from there into Chinese. This combination of large overview and technical skill served as a background for some notable discoveries and conjectures. The departure of von der Gabelentz for Berlin in 1889 had left a Sinological gap at Leipzig that was not immediately filled. Conrady gradually filled the gap, and in the process made a second beginning of Sinology at Leipzig. He became a lecturer in East Asian Languages in 1891, established the Ostasiatisches Seminar in 1913, and eventually rose to a professorship (1920). His students at Leipzig included some notable figures: Gustav Haloun, Otto Maenchen-Helfen, Lin Yutang, Bruno Schindler, and his own nephew and Leipzig successor Eduard Erkes.
The brilliant and humanistically broad Conrady was a puzzlement to his contemporaries (Pelliot remarked that nobody in his time could properly evaluate some of his suggestions), and an inspiration to his successors. He showed the existence of sonant initials in ancient Chinese, and noted their relationship with later tonal developments, a fact incorporated in the work of Karlgren. He identified the phonetic of a character as also its genetic, a point further developed by Reifler. He anticipated the affixation theory of Maspero, a line of inquiry that is only now coming into its own. His influence is thus considerable, but it is also incomplete. Conrady published relatively little in his lifetime, but Schindler found that, of 390 manuscripts left behind at his death, about half were in publishable condition. Of that half, it stands to reason that many will be either dead ends or live ends that in the interim have been rediscovered by others. What about the remainder? At last report, the matter has not been pursued.
E Bruce Brooks
Bibliography
- August Conrady. Eine Indo-Chinesische Causativ-Denominativ-Bildung und ihr Zusammenhang mit den Tonaccenten (1896)
- Johannes Hertel. Nekrolog auf August Conrady, in: Berichte über die Verhandlungen der Sächsischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, Philologisch-historische Klasse, v 77 #4 (1926) 7-14
- Bruno Schindler. Der Wissenschaftliche Nachlass August Conradys. AM 3 (1926) 104-115
- Eduard Erkes. Georg von der Gabelentz und August Conrady, in: Ernst Engelberg (ed), Beiträge zu Universitätsgeschichte 1405-1959, Karl-Marx-Universität Leipzig v1 (1959) 439-463
- David B Honey. Incense at the Altar. AOS 2001, 132f
- Christina Leibfried. Sinologie an der Universität Leipzig: Entstehung und Wirken des Ostasiatischen Seminars 1878 bis 1947. Beiträge zur Leipziger Universitäts- und Wissenschaftsgeschichte ser B v1 (2003)
- August Conrady page at Leipzig University
Wolfgang Behr contributed to this profile.
12 June 2004 / Contact The Project / Exit to Sinology Page