Johann Arnold Kanne

Johann Arnold Kanne (31 May 1773, Detmold 17 December 1824, Erlangen) was a German philologist and linguist. In his writings, he used the pseudonyms Johannes Author, Walther Bergius and Anton von Preußen.[1]

Beginning in 1790, he studied theology and classical philology at the University of Göttingen, where he was a pupil of Christian Gottlob Heyne. Later on, he worked as schoolteacher in Halle an der Saale, Hersbruck and Leutenberg, and served as a soldier in both the Austrian and Prussian armies. In 1809, through mediation from author Jean Paul, he became an instructor of archaeology and history at the newly founded "Real Institute" in Nuremberg. In 1818 he was appointed professor of Oriental languages at the University of Erlangen.[2]

Kannes developed a method of "speculative etymology", in which he tried to find the one primordial mythology that decided all others. His method was an attempt to discover the so-called primordial language on which the primordial mythology was based. He postulated that language arose from "root words" for the divine based on the mystical dynamism of natural phenomena. He further postulated that since root words didn't change, all language evolved from them. He believed that he could reveal these root words by way of an etymology that merged the root words of all archaic languages,[3] His derivation of a general theory of mythology from the etymological method, although scientifically unfounded, was an important influence to the young career of Jacob Grimm.[2]

Selected works

References

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