Dr. Felix Wiedemann is a Privatdozent (Lecturer) and researcher at the Department of History at Freie Universität Berlin. He holds a Ph.D. (2006) and Habilitation (2018) both from Freie Universität Berlin. Wiedermann is the author of Am Anfang war Migration [In the Beginning There Was Migration] (2020) and Rassenmutter und Rebellin [Race Mother and Rebel] (2007). His research interests include the history of science and historiography, theory of history, migration-history, European orientalism(s), history of modern anti-Semitism and racism, right-wing extremism, and new religious movements.
Last Updated
February 15, 2021
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In 1902, Friedrich Delitzsch argued in his Babel und Bibel (Babylon and the Bible) lecture series that the biblical texts are dependent upon and inferior to those of Babylonia. A key piece of evidence was the Hammurabi Stele, discovered only months before, but traditional scholars responded by maintaining the ethical superiority of Mosaic law.
In 1902, Friedrich Delitzsch argued in his Babel und Bibel (Babylon and the Bible) lecture series that the biblical texts are dependent upon and inferior to those of Babylonia. A key piece of evidence was the Hammurabi Stele, discovered only months before, but traditional scholars responded by maintaining the ethical superiority of Mosaic law.