Lambert ten Kate

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Lambert ten Kate
Born 23 January 1674
Amsterdam
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Amsterdam
Cause of death A lingering illness
Spouse(s) Not married
Parent(s) Mennonites

Lambert ten Kate (23 January 1674 – 14 December 1731) was a Dutch linguist. His specialization was in comparative historical linguistics. He was also a well known art collector.

Early life

Ten Kate was born in Amsterdam to Mennonite parents.[1] He studied at the Haarlem Collegium Physicum, and was a pupil of Adriaan Verwer.[2]

Career

Early in his career, ten Kate was a merchant, as partner with his father, Herman ten Kate (1644-1706). The ten Kates engaged in the business of trading in corns, though it was not a preference for the younger man. He eventually left the family business, giving his attention to linguistics, especially, historical-comparative work, etymology, methodology, and the standard language.[3] An early phonetician,[4] he wrote linguistic and theological treatises on Dutch and other Germanic languages. His first published work on linguistics was at the instigation of Verwer. In his Aenleiding tot de kennisse van het verhevene deel der Nederduitsche sprake (1723), he made scientific comparisons of older language stages. By observation of the written and spoken language of his own time, he developed linguistic rules to detect and capture language changes. As his publications were all in his native Dutch language and not in Latin, he was not known internationally.[1] His notable work, Geméénschap tussen de Gottische spraeke en de Nederduytsche ('Affinities and Similarities between the Dutch and Gothic Languages) was published anonymously. Thirteen years later, his magnum opus publication was a two-volume Aenleiding tot de kennisse van het verhevene deel der Nederduitsche sprake ('Introduction to the knowledge of the most important part of the Dutch language').[5] He died of a lingering illness in Amsterdam in 1731,[1] and was buried in the Noorderkerk.[2]

Publications

His major publications are the following.[3]

  • AJ van der Aa, Biographical dictionary of the Netherlands. Part 10 (1862)
  • F. Jos. van den Branden and JG Frederiks, Biographical dictionary of the northern and southern Dutch Literature (1888-1891)
  • PJ Blok and PC Molhuysen, New Netherland biographical dictionary. Part 5 (1921)
  • K. at Avenue Literary dictionary for North and South (1952)
  • Wim van Anrooij, Ingrid Biesheuvel, Karina van Dalen-Oskam and Jan Noordegraaf, and Bio-bibliographical dictionary of neerlandistiek (2004 - ...)

See also

References

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External links