Born at
Nagykőrös in Hungary, Uri studied the oriental languages under
Jan Jacob Schultens at
Leyden University, where he took the degrees of Ph.D. and D.D. In 1766 the
University of Oxford decided a catalogue should be made of the oriental manuscripts in the
Bodleian Library for two hundred years. A scholar was sought to undertake this work, and on the advice of
Sir Joseph Yorke, ambassador in the Netherlands, given to Archbishop
Thomas Secker, Uri received an invitation to Oxford. There he was provided with a stipend, and set to compile the catalogue. Uri did some teaching at Oxford,
Joseph White being his most distinguished pupil. At the end of his life, he was discharged by the delegates of the Press, but through
Henry Kett and other friends he obtained provision for his last years. He died at his lodgings in Oxford on 18 October 1796. ==Works==