Gustaf Lillieblad


Gustaf Lillieblad or Gustaf Peringer was a Swedish orientalist, professor and librarian.

Biography

Gustaf Peringer was born at Strängnäs in Södermanland, Sweden. His father Lars Fredrik Peringer was senior master at the gymnasium. His brother Johan Peringskiöld was secretary of the National College of Antiquities. His surname would be changed to Lillieblad upon acquiring noble title.
Peringer entered to Uppsala University in 1671, where his interest was directed to the Eastern languages, mainly Persian, Turkish and Arabic, In 1675 he published a dissertation on the subject. He traveled extensively but mainly in the European continent, gaining knowledge of the languages including Hebrew, Chaldean, Syriac, Arabic, Turkish, and Ethiopian languages. He returned to Sweden in 1681, and was appointed professor of Oriental Languages in the University of Uppsala. King Charles XII sent him to Poland to study Karaite Judaism, which led to the publication in 1691 of Epistola de Karaitis Lithuaniae ad Johan Ludolphum.
In 1695, was appointed royal secretary and censor librorum and was appointed court librarian of the Royal Library in 1703.

Selected works