'Carl Friedrich Michael Meinhof' (
July 23,
1857 —
February 11,
1944) was a
German linguist known as one of the first linguists to study
African languages.
Early years and career
He was born in
Barzwitz (current
Polish Pomerania). In 1905 he became professor at the
School of Oriental Studies in
Berlin.
Works
He was most notable for the work that he did developing comparative
grammar studies of the
Bantu languages. He followed from the pioneering work of
Wilhelm Heinrich Immanuel Bleek on Bantu grammar. In his work, Meinhof looked at the common
Bantu languages such as
Swahili and
Zulu to determine similarities and differences.
In his work, Meinhof looked at
noun classes with all Bantu languages having at least 10 classes and with 22 classes of nouns existing throughout the Bantu languages, though his definition of noun class differs slightly from the accepted one. While no language has all 22,
Sesotho has 18. All Bantu languages have a noun class specifically for humans (sometimes including other animate beings).
Meinhof also looked at other African languages including the
Kordofanian languages,
Bushman,
Khoikhoi and
Hamitic languages. During his career, Meinhof published several books on African languages and made recordings of East African music in 1902 which was one of the first recordings made of traditional
African music.
Family
On a side note, Carl Meinhof was the brother of
Ulrike Meinhof's grandfather and thus the great-uncle of the woman who would be a founding member of the German
Red Army Faction (RAF).
References
★
Grundzüge einer vergleichenden Grammatik der Bantusprachen, , Carl, Meinhof, Reimer, 1906,
★ Sara Pugach, "Images of Race and Redemption. The Protestant missionary contribution to Carl Meinhof's Zeitschrift für Kolonialsprachen", _LFM. Social sciences & missions_, No.15, Dec. 2004, pp.59-96