(Redirected from Wackernagel)'Jacob Wackernagel' (also ''Jakob'',
1853–
1938) was an
Indo-Europeanist and scholar of
Sanskrit. He was born in
Basel, son to the philologist
Wilhelm Wackernagel.
He studied Classical and Germanic philology and history in
Göttingen and
Leipzig, and taught at Basel University, from
1879 as professor for Greek, as the successor of
Friedrich Nietzsche.
1902 he was called to ''
Georgia Augusta'' Göttingen University, but as a consequence of
World War I, he returned to Basel in
1915.
He retired in
1936, and died on 22 May 1938 in Basel.
Wackernagel's major work is the ''
Altindische Grammatik'', a comprehensive grammar of the Sanskrit language. He is best known among modern linguists and philologists for formulating "Wackernagel's Law", concerning the placement of unstressed words in "second position" in Indo-European sentences (1892, "Über ein Gesetz der indogermanischen Wortstellung", ''Indogermanische Forschungen'' '1', pp. 333–436).
See also
★
Clitic
External links
★ http://www.stadtarchiv.goettingen.de/personen/wackernagel.htm
★ http://pages.unibas.ch/klaphil/idg/allg/wackernagel.html