Terpene

James Frederick Schön (1802, in Ober Weiler – 30 March 1889, in Chatham) was a German missionary and linguist who was active in Sierra Leone. He also participated in the Niger expedition of 1841.[1][2]

After attending the Basel Seminary, Schön attended the Church Missionary Society College in London;[1][3] he was ordained as a priest in 1832 and immediately went to Sierra Leone. He remained active with the Church Missionary Society until 1853.[1][3]

He became a naturalized British subject in 1854.[3]

He became an expert on the Hausa language and is credited with writing the first Christian material in Hausa when he translated the Lord's Prayer in 1843.[4] He was awarded an honorary doctorate from Oxford University in 1884.[1][3]

Family

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His first wife was Anne Elizabeth Nyländer, the daughter of Gustavus Nyländer, another missionary and linguist.[3] They had one daughter, Annie Catherine, who married a CMS missionary named Edward Thomas Higgens.[5]

His second wife was Cordelia Jackson Irwine; he later married Elizabeth Catherine Drake, the widow of James White, another CMS missionary.[5] He and Elizabeth had nine children and also took in several other children including Sarah Forbes Bonetta.[5][6]

Works

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  • Translations of seven Parables and Discources of our Lord Jesus Christ into the Sherbro Language of West Africa (1839)
  • Journal of the Niger Expedition (1842)
  • Vocabulary and Elements of Grammar of the Haussa Language (1843)
  • Translations of Genesis, Exodus, the Gospels, and the Acts of the Apostles into the Hausa Language (1857-1861)
  • Grammar of the Haussa Language (1862)
  • Dictionary of the Hausa Language (1876)
  • Vocabulary of the Mende language (1884)[7]
  • Magana Hausa: Hausa Stories and Fables (1885)[8]

His papers are archived at the University of Birmingham.[1][9]

See also

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Samuel Ajayi Crowther

References

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