Bayer was a native of Königsberg, East Prussia. His father Johann Friedrich was from the German Protestant minority in Hungary, but had moved to East Prussia where he worked as a painter.[3] The youthful T. S. Bayer was an excellent student at the University of Königsberg, studying Latin, Greek and Hebrew.[4] He was a Rector of the Königsberg Cathedral from 1721 to 1726,[2] and also worked as a librarian at the Königsberg Public Library.[1]
Bayer collection
He had a library of more than 200 manuscripts, Chinese and other Oriental books, including:
After his death in Saint Petersburg his widow handed over his books and papers to the academy authorities, receiving the rest of her husband's pay due that year.[5] The library was later sold to a Lutheranpastor in London, Heinrich Walter Gerdes. William Hunter later purchased the collection from Gerdes' widow. It finally reached the University of Glasgow in 1807 with a brief stay in London with Dr Matthew Baillie, Hunter's nephew.[6][7]
Works
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Historia regni Graecorum bactriani [A History of the Kingdom of the Bactrian Greeks].[8]