Anthropos (journal)

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History

When Schmidt got the first issue of Anthropos out in February 1906 (then at Missionshaus St. Gabriel  [ de ] near Vienna in Austria), it was praised not only by the religious scholars, but also by such an anti-clerical figure as the French ethnographer Arnold van Gennep. Van Gennep confirmed his initial opinion a year later, stating that the four issues printed so far "place this journal among the ethnographic publications of the first rank". [3]

The initial name of the publication was Anthropos - Internationale Zeitschrift für Völker- und Sprachenkunde ("International Review of Ethnology and Linguistcs"), as suggested by Paul Huber (then owner of Kösel-Verlag  [ de ]) and Karl Muth; Schmidt himself considered Latin names like Omnes Gentes ("All Peoples"). [1]

The first issue contained (on 163 pages [3] ) articles in German, English, French, Spanish, Italian, Latin; more languages were added later. However, in the beginning of the 21st century English predominates. [1]

Missionshaus St. Augustin, the current location of the Anthropos Institute 2014-05-10-sankt-augustin-arnold-janssen-strasse-30-steyler-missionshaus-12.jpg
Missionshaus St. Augustin, the current location of the Anthropos Institute

Schmidt always wanted to have an institution behind the journal. It took him 25 years to create the Anthropos Institute, but the interbellum conditions limited the possibilities, so a regular editorial structure was only put into place in 1962, when Anthropos moved to Missionshaus St. Augustin  [ de ] in Germany. In the meantime, after the Anschluss in 1938, Anthropos was operating out of Posieux in Switzerland (for more than 60 years the printing continued to be done in Swiss Fribourg, even after the move of editorial staff to Germany). [4]

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