Jens Daniel Carolus Lieblein (23 December 1827 – 13 August 1911) was a NorwegianEgyptologist and magazine editor. He was a professor at the University of Oslo from 1876, the first professor of Egyptology in Norway.
Lieblein was born in Christiania as a son of shoemaker Johan Martin Lieblein and Anne Karine Hofgaard. Lieblein's father died in 1838, and Lieblein started working at a sawmill from the age of 11 years. In his leisure time, he studied history and languages, including German, French, Latin and Greek. After 14 years at the sawmill, he attended a school in Christiania. From 1855, he studied philology and history at the University, graduating in 1861. He began a study of ancient Indian culture and learned Sanskrit. He then focused on ancient Egyptian culture, studying in Berlin, Paris, Turin, London and Leiden.[1]
His earliest publication was Aegyptische Chronologie (1863), which did much to systematize that branch, especially in the sequel, Recherches sur la chronologie egyptienne d'après les listes généalogiques (1873).[3] Among Leiblein's major works are the dictionaries Dictionnaire de noms hiéroglyphiques, en ordre généalogique et alphabétique in French in 1871, and the subsequent Hieroglyphisches Namen-Wörterbuch, genealogisch und alphabetisch geordnet in German in 1891.[1] He also published three volumes on ancient Egyptian religion, Gammelægyptisk Religion, populært fremstillet, issued between 1883 and 1885 in Norwegian.[1] Other works are Handel und Schiffahrt auf dem rothen Meere in alten Zeiten (1886), and Le livre égyptien: Que mon nom fleurisse (1895).[3]
Family
He was married to Johanne Alette Danielsen from 1864 to 1866, to Jonette Nielsen from 1869 to 1893, and to Dagny Louise Brodersen from 1899. He was the father of writer Severin Lieblein.[1]