Friedrich W. K. Müller

Friedrich W. K. Müller (January 21, 1863 in Neudamm – April 18, 1930 in Berlin) was a German scholar of oriental cultures and languages.

He is best remembered for his decipherment of manuscript fragments collected on the German Turfan expeditions to western China.

[1] From 1883 he studied theology and oriental languages at the University of Berlin, where his influences included Eduard Sachau and Wilhelm Grube.

Except for a research trip to the Far East (China, Korea, Japan) in 1901, he remained at the museum until his retirement in 1928.

You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article about a person involved in the study of Central Asia is a stub.