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Wilhelm Schmidt (1868–1954) był austriackim lingwistą, antropologiem i etnologiem.
Wilhelm Schmidt was born in Hörde, Germany in 1868. He entered the Society of the Divine Word in 1890, and was ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in 1892. He studied linguistics at the universities of Berlin and Vienna.
His early work in linguistics was on the Mon-Khmer languages of South East Asia, which led him to hypothesize the existence of a broader Austric group of languages, connected to the Austronesian language group.
From 1912 on, Schmidt began to publish his 12-volume Der Ursprung der Gottesidee, The Origin of the Idea of God, and developed his theory of primitive monotheism — the belief that primitive religion in almost all tribal peoples began with an essentially monotheistic concept of a high god — usually a sky god — who was a benevolent creator. Schmidt theorized that human beings created a God who was the First Cause of all things and Ruler of Heaven and Earth before men and women began to worship a number of gods.[1]
In 1906, Schmidt founded the journal Anthropos, and in 1931, the Anthropos Institute, both of which still exist today. In 1938, Schmidt and the Institute fled from Nazi-occupied Austria to Fribourg, Switzerland.
His works available in English translation are: The Origin and Growth of Religion (1931), High Gods in North America (1933), The Culture Historical Method of Ethnology (1939), and Primitive Revelation (1939).
[[Category:1868 births|Schmidt, Wilhelm]] [[Category:1954 deaths|Schmidt, Wilhelm]] [[Category:German anthropologists|Schmidt, Wilhelm]] [[Category:Anthropologists|Schmidt, Wilhelm]] [[Category:German linguists|Schmidt, Wilhelm]] [[ca:Wilhelm Schmidt]] [[cs:Wilhelm Schmidt]] [[de:Wilhelm Schmidt (Ethnologe)]]