| Joh. Jac. Schmick Miscellanea linguae nationis Indicae Mahikan ca.1753-1767 (0.2 linear feet) 497.3 Sch5
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American Philosophical Society
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Abstract
Born in Königsberg, Prussia, in 1714, the Moravian missionary Johann Jacob Schmick studied theology as a young man and became
acquainted with the teachings of the United Brethren as early as 1742, taking his first communion six years later. He was
called to become a missionary in 1751, and was appointed to the Indian congregation at Gnadenhutten, Pa., ministering primarily
to a congregation of Mahican converts who had settled there. Schmick taught reading and writing, and was particularly known
for teaching singing and introducing the spinet and other instruments to the Indians. He continued in his missionary work
almost to the time of his death in 1778.
Schmick's Miscellanea linguae nationis Indicae Mahikan consists of two volumes (322pp.) of manuscript vocabulary and notes
on the Mahican language recorded between about 1753 and 1767. It consists of words and phrases in Mahican, written phonologically,
and translated into their German equivalents. The volumes have been edited, translated, and published by Carl Masthay as
Schmick's Mahican Dictionary APS Memoir 197 (1991).
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