Zimmer, Heinrich (1890–1943)
One of the best-known interpreters of
Hindu thought and mythology. After
studying Hebrew literature, German
philology and history of art at Berlin,
he discovered his interest in ancient
India. Dismissed from his position in
Heidelberg by the Nazi government
(because of his Jewish wife), he first
moved to Oxford and then to the USA
where he became visiting professor at
Columbia University. His writings
cover a wide range, from mythology to
medicine, from Buddhism to Jainism to
Hinduism. His early writings were in
German: Kunstform und Yoga(1926),
Ewiges Indien (1930), Indische
Sphaeren(1935). His English works
were posthumously edited by his for-
mer student Joseph Campbell: The Art
of Indian Asia(1955), Philosophies of
India (1951), Myths and Symbols in
Indian Art and Civilization (1946),
The King and the Corpse (1947).
Zimmer had a gift for presenting
Indian ideas in an intellectually and
aesthetically accessible and appealing
way, and created a great amount
of interest in Hinduism among the
general public.
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