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2001
Seminar Series Click here for information about the 2002 seminar series with Steven Collins
Click here for a photograph of the 2001 seminar
PROF
TERRY BLODGETT,
PhD
IN
AUSTRALIA
& NEW ZEALAND IN JUNE 2001! PRESENTING A SEMINAR ON: TRACING THE MIGRATIONS OF THE ISRAELITES THROUGH LINGUISTICS, HERALDRY & MYTHOLOGY
WHAT
HAPPENED TO THE LOST 10 TRIBES? When the Israelites were
taken captive or fled their homes in advance of the Assyrian conquest of
Israel around 720 BC, they didn’t return to their homeland. Where did they
go? Much speculation has surrounded their disappearance, and recently,
historians and scholars have begun to uncover the fascinating trails left by
these ‘lost’ Israelites.
WHERE
ARE THEY NOW? Have the Israelites ‘died
out’? Are they represented only by the Jewish people?
IS
IT IMPORTANT TO KNOW?
One
third of the Bible is prophecy, and many scriptures relate to Israel at the
‘time of the end’. Are these prophecies ‘a waste of space’, or did God
intend that the identity of Israel would finally be known?
PROF.
TERRY BLODGETT Prof. Blodgett, a specialist in the study of linguistics, has carefully pieced together information we believe you will find fascinating and thought provoking. He has given over 100 public presentations to Lion’s Clubs, Rotary International, literary clubs, religious groups, faculty and students of languages, archaeology, history, religion, and Biblical Hebrew studies. Prof. Blodgett has also written a book on the 4 migrations of Israel based on his intensive research. After obtaining his B.A. (Utah) with a Major in German and Minor in Psychology, he continued numerous post-graduate studies, completing his Ph.D. (Utah) in 1981 with a Major in German Literature, and a Minor in Historical Linguistics. His Doctoral Dissertation was Phonological Similarities in Germanic and Hebrew. In 1983 he undertook Post Doctoral Studies in Civilization and Culture (University of Bonn, Germany). Interests and languages studied: Linguistics, both Historical and Comparative; Ancient History, Archaeology, Middle Eastern Studies; Hebrew both Modern and Biblical; English History; and languages – English, Gothic, Old Norse, Anglo Saxon, Old High German, Latin, French, Spanish.
TOPICS,
VENUES AND DATES
Admission
is free to all sessions (donations are welcomed to cover costs) and various
free literature and information will also be available.
AUCKLAND: 2 June (10.30am & 2.00pm, Saturday) Ph: 09-426-8717 or 0800-959-535 Venue: The Lynfield Room Fickling Centre, 546 Mt Albert Road, Three King's, Auckland Further information: click here
SYDNEY:
10 June
(11am and 2pm, Sunday - Queen’s Birthday Weekend)
Ph: (02) 9482 2996 pm
Venue: Regency
Function Centre, Burwood RSL, Shaftesbury Road, Burwood
11:00 am
The Four Sound
Shifts which Identify the Four Migrations of the Israelites
2:00 pm
The Identity of
the Cimmerians and Scythians as Israelites 3:15 pm The Israelites' use of Heraldic Symbols for Identification---and the Spread of these Symbols into Europe Further information: click here Letter of invitation: click here Burwood map:
BRISBANE:
16 June
(2pm, Saturday) Ph:
(07) 3841 3572
Venue: State Library Theatrette, Level 2, State Library of Qld
Building, South Brisbane (cnr Peel & Stanley Streets)
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ VITA
EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND
1965-68 B.A. Degree, Utah State University: Major: German; Minor: Psychology
1967 Undergraduate Studies: German/Foreign Language Teaching Methodology Hofstra University, New York
1968-71 M.A. Degree: Brigham Young University Major: German Literature; Minor: Historical Linguistics Thesis: A Study of Heinrich von Kleist’s Theories of National Security as Portrayed in Die Hermannsschlacht.
1971-73 Doctoral studies in German literature and linguistics: University of Utah
1975 Graduate studies in German literature: University of Minnesota
1981 Ph.D. Degree: University of Utah Major: German Literature; Minor: Historical Linguistics Doctoral Dissertation: Phonological Similarities in Germanic and Hebrew
1983 Post Doctoral Studies in Civilization and Culture: University of Bonn, Germany
ACADEMIC HONORS AND AWARDS
1967 National Defense Education Act (NDEA) "Undergraduate Scholar from Utah" One stipend recipient per state to study German Language and Literature Teaching Methods, Hofstra University, New York
1975 National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), Stipend Recipient for summer graduate studies in German Existentialist Literature, U. of Minnesota; Presentation: "Heinrich von Kleist as a Forerunner to Modern Existentialism"
1983 Fulbright Scholarship to facilitate studies in Europe and attendance at Fulbright Seminar: German Culture and Civilization, Bonn and Berlin, Germany
SCHOLARLY ACTIVITIES
Title: "Linguistic Similarities in Germanic and Hebrew"
Title: "A Comparison of Germanic and Hebrew Sound Shifts"
1983 Five Lectures in Europe while visiting as a Fulbright Scholar:
1984 Lecturer at SUU’s "Jewish Week"—Presentation to SUU students, faculty, and Israeli guests; Title: "Tracing Israelite Migrations Through Linguistic Patterns," SUU, Cedar City, Utah
1985 Presentation to Utah Academy of Arts, Sciences and Letters; Title of paper: "Middle Eastern Migrations into Europe"
1986 Presentation to Utah Academy of Arts, Sciences and Letters; Title of paper: "Middle Eastern Migrations into Europe, Part II"
1994 Publication of article: "Tracing the Dispersion" in Ensign, February, 1994
1994 Guest Lecturer by invitation: Deseret Language and Linguistics society (DLLS); Title of presentation: "In search of the Indo-European Homeland"
1995 Guest Lecturer by invitation: Department of Linguistics, Brigham Young University; Title of presentation: "Evidence that the Proto-Indo-European Language was Hebrew"
1996 A public presentation, "Israel’s Migrations: Linguistic Evidence," sponsored by Dr. Arval L. Streadbeck, Dissertation Chairman, Department of Languages, University of Utah
1999 By invitation, keynote speaker, "The Four Sound Shifts of the Four Israelite Migrations," Shenandoah Valley Language and Linguistics Conference at Southern Virginia College Workshops/Seminars attended: "Middle Eastern Studies—Arabic" (Snowbird, UT), "German
Primary Field of Interest: German Language, Literature, Culture, and History
Related Fields of Interest and Languages studied: Linguistics—Historical and Comparative, Ancient History, Archaeology, Middle Eastern Studies, Hebrew—Modern and Biblical, English History and Language, Gothic, Old Norse, Anglo Saxon, Old High German, Latin,, French, Spanish
GRADUATE COURSES TAKEN
Literature Language and Linguistics Earliest German Lit to 1750 Bibliography and Research History of Indo-European Languages Baroque Literature Literary Criticism History of the German Language Enlightenment Writing Techniques History of Germanic Linguistics Storm and Stress Herder German Phonetics and Phonemics Classicism Lessing, Goethe, Schiller Old High German Romanticism Kleist, Novalis, Tieck Middle High German Poetic Realism Storm, Stifter, Keller Gothic Naturalism, Expressionism Hauptmann, Werfel, Kafka Old Norse Impressionism, Surrealism Mann, Hesse, Durrenmatt Philology Seminar Post-War Literature Borchert, Brecht Advanced Comparative Linguistics Classical Epics Strasbourg, Eschenbach Transformational Grammar
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT
1971-1973 Teaching Fellowship: University of Utah (doctoral candidate) 1973-1982 Assistant Professor: Southern Utah University 1981-1987 Chairman, Department of Languages: Southern Utah University 1982-1991 Associate Professor: Southern Utah University 1991 Professor: Southern Utah University
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