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Monier Monier-Williams

Sir Monier Monier-Williams KCIE (/ˈmɒniər/; Williams; 12 November 1819 – 11 April 1899) was a British scholar who was the second Boden Professor of Sanskrit at Oxford University, England. He studied, documented and taught Asian languages, especially Sanskrit, Persian and Hindustani.


Monier Monier-Williams

Photo of Monier Monier-Williams by Lewis Carroll
Born
Monier Williams

(1819-11-12)12 November 1819
Bombay, Bombay Presidency, British India
Died11 April 1899(1899-04-11) (aged 79)
Cannes, France
EducationKing's College School, Balliol College, Oxford;
East India Company College;
University College, Oxford
Known forBoden Professor of Sanskrit;
Sanskrit–English dictionary
AwardsKnight Bachelor;
Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire

Early life

Monier Williams was born in Bombay, the son of Colonel Monier Williams, surveyor-general in the Bombay presidency. His surname was "Williams" until 1887, when he added his given name to his surname to create the hyphenated "Monier-Williams". In 1822, he was sent to England to be educated at private schools at Hove, Chelsea and Finchley. He was educated at King's College School, Balliol College, Oxford (1838–40), the East India Company College (1840–41) and University College, Oxford (1841–44). He took a fourth-class honours degree in Literae Humaniores in 1844.[1]

He married Julia Grantham in 1848. They had six sons and one daughter. He died, aged 79, in Cannes, France.[2]

In 1874 he bought and lived in Enfield House, Ventnor, on the Isle of Wight where he and his family lived until at least 1881. (The 1881 census records the occupant was 61-year-old Professor Monier Monier-Williams; his wife, Julia; and two children, Montague (20) and Ella (22).)[citation needed]

Career

Monier Williams taught Asian languages at the East India Company College from 1844 until 1858[3][4] when company rule in India ended after the 1857 rebellion. He came to national prominence during the 1860 election campaign for the Boden Chair of Sanskrit at Oxford University, in which he stood against Max Müller.

The vacancy followed the death of Horace Hayman Wilson in 1860. Wilson had started the university's collection of Sanskrit manuscripts upon taking the chair in 1831, and had indicated his preference that Williams should be his successor. The campaign was notoriously acrimonious. Müller was known for his liberal religious views and his philosophical speculations based on his reading of Vedic literature. Monier Williams was seen as a less brilliant scholar, but had a detailed practical knowledge of India itself, and of actual religious practices in modern Hinduism. Müller, in contrast, had never visited India.[5]

Both candidates had to emphasise their support for Christian evangelisation in India, since that was the basis on which the professorship had been funded by its founder. Monier Williams' dedication to Christianisation was not doubted, unlike Müller's.[6] Monier Williams also stated that his aims were practical rather than speculative. "Englishmen are too practical to study a language very philosophically", he wrote.[5]

After his appointment to the professorship Williams declared from the outset that the conversion of India to the Christian religion should be one of the aims of orientalist scholarship.[6] In his book Hinduism, published by SPCK in 1877, he predicted the demise of the Hindu religion and called for Christian evangelism to ward off the spread of Islam.[6] According to Saurabh Dube this work is "widely credited to have introduced the term Hinduism into general English usage"[7] while David N. Lorenzen cites the book along with India, and India Missions: Including Sketches of the Gigantic System of Hinduism, Both in Theory and Practice : Also Notices of Some of the Principal Agencies Employed in Conducting the Process of Indian Evangelization[8][9]

Writings and foundations

 
Bookplate

When Monier Williams founded the University's Indian Institute in 1883, it provided both an academic focus and also a training ground for the Indian Civil Service.[2] Since the early 1870s Monier Williams planned this institution. His vision was the better acquaintance of England and India. On this account he supported academic research into Indian culture. Monier Williams travelled to India in 1875, 1876 and 1883 to finance his project by fundraising. He gained the support of Indian native princes. In 1883 the Prince of Wales laid the foundation stone; the building was inaugurated in 1896 by Lord George Hamilton. The Institute closed on Indian independence in 1947.

In his writings on Hinduism Monier Williams argued that the Advaita Vedanta system best represented the Vedic ideal and was the "highest way to salvation" in Hinduism. He considered the more popular traditions of karma and bhakti to be of lesser spiritual value. However, he argued that Hinduism is a complex "huge polygon or irregular multilateral figure" that was unified by Sanskrit literature. He stated that "no description of Hinduism can be exhaustive which does not touch on almost every religious and philosophical idea that the world has ever known."[6]

Monier-Williams compiled a Sanskrit–English dictionary, based on the earlier Petersburg Sanskrit Dictionary,[10] which was published in 1872. A later revised edition was published in 1899 with collaboration by Ernst Leumann and Carl Cappeller (sv).[11]

Honours

He was knighted in 1876, and was made KCIE in 1887, when he adopted his given name of Monier as an additional surname. He was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1886.[12]

He also received the following academic honours: Honorary DCL, Oxford, 1875; LLD, Calcutta, 1876; Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford, 1880; Honorary PhD, Göttingen, 1880s; Vice-President, Royal Asiatic Society, 1890; Honorary Fellow of University College, Oxford, 1892.[2]

Published works

Translations

Monier-Williams's translations include that of Kālidāsa's plays Vikramorvasi (1849)[13] and Śākuntala (1853; 2nd ed. 1876).[14]

  • Translation of Shakuntala (1853)
  • Hindu Literature: comprising the Book of Good Counsels, Nala and Damayanti, the Rámáyana and Śakoontalá

Original works

  • An Elementary Grammar of the Sanscrit Language: Partly in the Roman Character, Arranged According to a New Theory, in Reference Especially to the Classical Languages; with Short Extracts in Easy Prose. To which is Added, a Selection from the Institutes of Manu, with Copious References to the Grammar, and an English Translation. W. H. Allen & Company. 1846.
  • Original papers illustrating the history of the application of the Roman alphabet to the languages of India: Edited by Monier Williams (1859) Modern Reprint
  • Indian Wisdom, Or, Examples of the Religious, Philosophical, and Ethical Doctrines of the Hindūs. London: Oxford. 1875.
  • Hinduism. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. 1877.
  • Modern India and the Indians: Being a Series of Impressions, Notes, and Essays. Trübner and Company. 1878.
  • Translation of Shikshapatri – The manuscript of the principal scripture Sir John Malcolm received from Swaminarayan on 26 February 1830 when he was serving as the Governor of Bombay Presidency, Imperial India. Currently preserved at Bodleian Library.
  • Brahmanism and Hinduism (1883)
  • Buddhism, in its connexion with Brahmanism and Hinduism, and in its contrast with Christianity (1889)[15]
  • Sanskrit-English Dictionary, ISBN 0-19-864308-X.
  • A Sanskrit-English Dictionary: Etymologically and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo-European languages, Monier Monier-Williams, revised by E. Leumann, C. Cappeller, et al. 1899, Clarendon Press, Oxford
  • A Practical Grammar of the Sanskrit Language, Arranged with Reference to the Classical Languages of Europe, for the Use of English Students, Oxford: Clarendon, 1857, enlarged and improved Fourth Edition 1887

Notes

  1. ^ Oxford University Calendar 1895, Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1895, p.131.
  2. ^ a b c Macdonell 1901.
  3. ^ Memorials of old Haileybury College. A. Constable and Company. 1894.
  4. ^ "Review of Memorials of Old Haileybury College by Sir Monier Monier-Williams and other Contributors". The Quarterly Review. 179: 224–243. July 1894.
  5. ^ a b Nirad C. Chaudhuri, Scholar Extraordinary, The Life of Professor the Right Honourable Friedrich Max Muller, P.C., Chatto and Windus, 1974, pp. 221–231.
  6. ^ a b c d Terence Thomas, The British: their religious beliefs and practices, 1800–1986, Routledge, 1988, pp. 85–88.
  7. ^ Saurabh Dube (1998). Untouchable Pasts: Religion, Identity, and Power among a Central Indian Community, 1780–1950. SUNY Press. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-7914-3687-5.
  8. ^ Alexander Duff (1839). India, and India Missions: Including Sketches of the Gigantic System of Hinduism, Both in Theory and Practice : Also Notices of Some of the Principal Agencies Employed in Conducting the Process of Indian Evangelization, &c. &c. J. Johnstone. for popularising of the term.
  9. ^ David N. Lorenzen (2006). Who Invented Hinduism: Essays on Religion in History. Yoda Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-81-902272-6-1.
  10. ^ Kamalakaran, Ajay (12 April 2014). "St Petersburg's illustrious Sanskrit connections". www.rbth.com. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  11. ^ Bloomfield, Maurice (1900). "A Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Etymologically and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo-European Languages by Monier Monier-Williams; E. Leumann; C. Cappeller". The American Journal of Philology. 21 (3): 323–327. doi:10.2307/287725. hdl:2027/mdp.39015016641824. JSTOR 287725.
  12. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
  13. ^ Schuyler, Jr., Montgomery (1902). "Bibliography of Kālidāsa's Mālavikāgnimitra and Vikramorvaçī". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 23: 93–101. doi:10.2307/592384. JSTOR 592384.
  14. ^ Schuyler, Jr., Montgomery (1901). "The Editions and Translations of Çakuntalā". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 22: 237–248. doi:10.2307/592432. JSTOR 592432.
  15. ^ "Buddhism in Its Connexion with Brahmanism and Hinduism and in Its Contrast with Christianity". The Old Testament Student. 8 (10): 389–390. June 1889. doi:10.1086/470215. JSTOR 3156561.

References

  • Katz, J. B. (2004). "Williams, Sir Monier Monier-". In Katz, J. B (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (October 2007 ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18955. Retrieved 31 January 2013. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Attribution

External links

  • SpokenSankrit Online Free Dictionary
  • Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries (Searchable), Monier-Williams' Sanskrit-English Dictionary
  • Biography of Sir Monier Monier-Williams, Dr. Gillian Evison, Digital Shikshapatri
  • Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Searchable
  • Monier-Williams Shikshapatri manuscript, Digital Shikshapatri
  • Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary: DICT and HTML versions
  • Works by Monier Monier-Williams at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Monier Monier-Williams at Internet Archive

monier, monier, williams, kcie, williams, november, 1819, april, 1899, british, scholar, second, boden, professor, sanskrit, oxford, university, england, studied, documented, taught, asian, languages, especially, sanskrit, persian, hindustani, sirkciephoto, le. Sir Monier Monier Williams KCIE ˈ m ɒ n i er ne Williams 12 November 1819 11 April 1899 was a British scholar who was the second Boden Professor of Sanskrit at Oxford University England He studied documented and taught Asian languages especially Sanskrit Persian and Hindustani SirMonier Monier WilliamsKCIEPhoto of Monier Monier Williams by Lewis CarrollBornMonier Williams 1819 11 12 12 November 1819Bombay Bombay Presidency British IndiaDied11 April 1899 1899 04 11 aged 79 Cannes FranceEducationKing s College School Balliol College Oxford East India Company College University College OxfordKnown forBoden Professor of Sanskrit Sanskrit English dictionaryAwardsKnight Bachelor Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Writings and foundations 4 Honours 5 Published works 5 1 Translations 5 2 Original works 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditMonier Williams was born in Bombay the son of Colonel Monier Williams surveyor general in the Bombay presidency His surname was Williams until 1887 when he added his given name to his surname to create the hyphenated Monier Williams In 1822 he was sent to England to be educated at private schools at Hove Chelsea and Finchley He was educated at King s College School Balliol College Oxford 1838 40 the East India Company College 1840 41 and University College Oxford 1841 44 He took a fourth class honours degree in Literae Humaniores in 1844 1 He married Julia Grantham in 1848 They had six sons and one daughter He died aged 79 in Cannes France 2 In 1874 he bought and lived in Enfield House Ventnor on the Isle of Wight where he and his family lived until at least 1881 The 1881 census records the occupant was 61 year old Professor Monier Monier Williams his wife Julia and two children Montague 20 and Ella 22 citation needed Career EditMonier Williams taught Asian languages at the East India Company College from 1844 until 1858 3 4 when company rule in India ended after the 1857 rebellion He came to national prominence during the 1860 election campaign for the Boden Chair of Sanskrit at Oxford University in which he stood against Max Muller The vacancy followed the death of Horace Hayman Wilson in 1860 Wilson had started the university s collection of Sanskrit manuscripts upon taking the chair in 1831 and had indicated his preference that Williams should be his successor The campaign was notoriously acrimonious Muller was known for his liberal religious views and his philosophical speculations based on his reading of Vedic literature Monier Williams was seen as a less brilliant scholar but had a detailed practical knowledge of India itself and of actual religious practices in modern Hinduism Muller in contrast had never visited India 5 Wikisource has original text related to this article Monier Williams s submission for the Boden Professorship election Both candidates had to emphasise their support for Christian evangelisation in India since that was the basis on which the professorship had been funded by its founder Monier Williams dedication to Christianisation was not doubted unlike Muller s 6 Monier Williams also stated that his aims were practical rather than speculative Englishmen are too practical to study a language very philosophically he wrote 5 After his appointment to the professorship Williams declared from the outset that the conversion of India to the Christian religion should be one of the aims of orientalist scholarship 6 In his book Hinduism published by SPCK in 1877 he predicted the demise of the Hindu religion and called for Christian evangelism to ward off the spread of Islam 6 According to Saurabh Dube this work is widely credited to have introduced the term Hinduism into general English usage 7 while David N Lorenzen cites the book along with India and India Missions Including Sketches of the Gigantic System of Hinduism Both in Theory and Practice Also Notices of Some of the Principal Agencies Employed in Conducting the Process of Indian Evangelization 8 9 Writings and foundations Edit Bookplate When Monier Williams founded the University s Indian Institute in 1883 it provided both an academic focus and also a training ground for the Indian Civil Service 2 Since the early 1870s Monier Williams planned this institution His vision was the better acquaintance of England and India On this account he supported academic research into Indian culture Monier Williams travelled to India in 1875 1876 and 1883 to finance his project by fundraising He gained the support of Indian native princes In 1883 the Prince of Wales laid the foundation stone the building was inaugurated in 1896 by Lord George Hamilton The Institute closed on Indian independence in 1947 In his writings on Hinduism Monier Williams argued that the Advaita Vedanta system best represented the Vedic ideal and was the highest way to salvation in Hinduism He considered the more popular traditions of karma and bhakti to be of lesser spiritual value However he argued that Hinduism is a complex huge polygon or irregular multilateral figure that was unified by Sanskrit literature He stated that no description of Hinduism can be exhaustive which does not touch on almost every religious and philosophical idea that the world has ever known 6 Monier Williams compiled a Sanskrit English dictionary based on the earlier Petersburg Sanskrit Dictionary 10 which was published in 1872 A later revised edition was published in 1899 with collaboration by Ernst Leumann and Carl Cappeller sv 11 Honours EditHe was knighted in 1876 and was made KCIE in 1887 when he adopted his given name of Monier as an additional surname He was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1886 12 He also received the following academic honours Honorary DCL Oxford 1875 LLD Calcutta 1876 Fellow of Balliol College Oxford 1880 Honorary PhD Gottingen 1880s Vice President Royal Asiatic Society 1890 Honorary Fellow of University College Oxford 1892 2 Published works EditTranslations Edit Monier Williams s translations include that of Kalidasa s plays Vikramorvasi 1849 13 and Sakuntala 1853 2nd ed 1876 14 Translation of Shakuntala 1853 Hindu Literature comprising the Book of Good Counsels Nala and Damayanti the Ramayana and SakoontalaOriginal works Edit An Elementary Grammar of the Sanscrit Language Partly in the Roman Character Arranged According to a New Theory in Reference Especially to the Classical Languages with Short Extracts in Easy Prose To which is Added a Selection from the Institutes of Manu with Copious References to the Grammar and an English Translation W H Allen amp Company 1846 Original papers illustrating the history of the application of the Roman alphabet to the languages of India Edited by Monier Williams 1859 Modern Reprint Indian Wisdom Or Examples of the Religious Philosophical and Ethical Doctrines of the Hindus London Oxford 1875 Hinduism Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge 1877 Modern India and the Indians Being a Series of Impressions Notes and Essays Trubner and Company 1878 Translation of Shikshapatri The manuscript of the principal scripture Sir John Malcolm received from Swaminarayan on 26 February 1830 when he was serving as the Governor of Bombay Presidency Imperial India Currently preserved at Bodleian Library Brahmanism and Hinduism 1883 Buddhism in its connexion with Brahmanism and Hinduism and in its contrast with Christianity 1889 15 Sanskrit English Dictionary ISBN 0 19 864308 X A Sanskrit English Dictionary Etymologically and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo European languages Monier Monier Williams revised by E Leumann C Cappeller et al 1899 Clarendon Press Oxford A Practical Grammar of the Sanskrit Language Arranged with Reference to the Classical Languages of Europe for the Use of English Students Oxford Clarendon 1857 enlarged and improved Fourth Edition 1887Notes Edit Oxford University Calendar 1895 Oxford Clarendon Press 1895 p 131 a b c Macdonell 1901 Memorials of old Haileybury College A Constable and Company 1894 Review of Memorials of Old Haileybury College by Sir Monier Monier Williams and other Contributors The Quarterly Review 179 224 243 July 1894 a b Nirad C Chaudhuri Scholar Extraordinary The Life of Professor the Right Honourable Friedrich Max Muller P C Chatto and Windus 1974 pp 221 231 a b c d Terence Thomas The British their religious beliefs and practices 1800 1986 Routledge 1988 pp 85 88 Saurabh Dube 1998 Untouchable Pasts Religion Identity and Power among a Central Indian Community 1780 1950 SUNY Press p 232 ISBN 978 0 7914 3687 5 Alexander Duff 1839 India and India Missions Including Sketches of the Gigantic System of Hinduism Both in Theory and Practice Also Notices of Some of the Principal Agencies Employed in Conducting the Process of Indian Evangelization amp c amp c J Johnstone for popularising of the term David N Lorenzen 2006 Who Invented Hinduism Essays on Religion in History Yoda Press p 4 ISBN 978 81 902272 6 1 Kamalakaran Ajay 12 April 2014 St Petersburg s illustrious Sanskrit connections www rbth com Retrieved 23 October 2020 Bloomfield Maurice 1900 A Sanskrit English Dictionary Etymologically and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo European Languages by Monier Monier Williams E Leumann C Cappeller The American Journal of Philology 21 3 323 327 doi 10 2307 287725 hdl 2027 mdp 39015016641824 JSTOR 287725 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 24 May 2021 Schuyler Jr Montgomery 1902 Bibliography of Kalidasa s Malavikagnimitra and Vikramorvaci Journal of the American Oriental Society 23 93 101 doi 10 2307 592384 JSTOR 592384 Schuyler Jr Montgomery 1901 The Editions and Translations of Cakuntala Journal of the American Oriental Society 22 237 248 doi 10 2307 592432 JSTOR 592432 Buddhism in Its Connexion with Brahmanism and Hinduism and in Its Contrast with Christianity The Old Testament Student 8 10 389 390 June 1889 doi 10 1086 470215 JSTOR 3156561 References EditKatz J B 2004 Williams Sir Monier Monier In Katz J B ed Oxford Dictionary of National Biography October 2007 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18955 Retrieved 31 January 2013 Subscription or UK public library membership required AttributionMacdonell Arthur Anthony 1901 Monier Williams Monier Dictionary of National Biography 1st supplement London Smith Elder amp Co pp 186 187 External links EditMonier Monier Williams at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata SpokenSankrit Online Free Dictionary Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries Searchable Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary Biography of Sir Monier Monier Williams Dr Gillian Evison Digital Shikshapatri Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary Searchable Monier Williams Shikshapatri manuscript Digital Shikshapatri The Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary DICT and HTML versions Works by Monier Monier Williams at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Monier Monier Williams at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monier Monier Williams amp oldid 1132604070, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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