Andreas Gottlieb Hoffmann

Andreas Gottlieb Hoffmann (April 13, 1796 – March 16, 1864) was a German Protestant theologian and Orientalist born in Welbsleben.

As a teenager he participated in the War of the Sixth Coalition as a member of the Second Prussian Foot Jäger Detachment.

In 1820 he earned his doctorate at the University of Halle, where he studied theology as well as Syriac and Hebrew languages.

[1] Hoffmann was the author of an acclaimed work on Syriac grammar (Grammatica syriaca) (1827), and was responsible for a German version of the Book of Enoch based on Richard Laurence's "Book of Enoch the Prophet" called Das Buch Henoch in vollständiger Uebersetzung.

He made important contributions to the second section of the Ersch-Gruber Allgemeine Encyclopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste.

Andreas Gottlieb Hoffmann, 1858.