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"philologist" Definitions
  1. a person who studies philology

1000 Sentences With "philologist"

How to use philologist in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "philologist" and check conjugation/comparative form for "philologist". Mastering all the usages of "philologist" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"The problem is that our president is not a philologist."
According to historian and philologist Peter F. Dorman, that seems unlikely—but not impossible.
Among them was Nachman Blumental, a philologist obsessed with the uses and misuses of language.
Philologist William Jones began using the symbol in 1706, but it was popularized by mathematician Leonhard Euler.
The tablets, described as "small and partly crumbling," were deciphered by University of Heidelberg philologist Dr. Betina Faist.
Vespucci was a classical scholar, trained by the most brilliant philologist of the late 15th century, Angelo Poliziano.
His grandfather, a philologist, published an anarchist newspaper; his father was a photographer and a scientist focused on butterflies.
After his death, she begins an affair with an Italian philologist, but wards off his affections by intellectualizing her grief.
His father was a polymath engineer, mathematician, scientist, and experimental photographer whose own father, a philologist, published an anarchist newspaper.
But as a philologist interested in Norse and other ancient tongues, and keen on the archaic, he certainly knew his Icelandic.
Coincidently, that same year, another survivor philologist, Viktor Klemperer, published "Language of the Third Reich," a similar enterprise dissecting Nazi usage.
"They do not represent a class, but a mass," the philologist Albin Wagener wrote in an op-ed for Les Echos.
Using the convenient narrative device of the "frame story," it portrays an elderly Salomé dictating her memories to the philologist Ernst Pfeiffer.
Growing up in Japan, he started out as an artist and then became a classical philologist (someone who studies and reconstructs ancient languages).
In addition to his son, his wife survives him, along with a daughter, Deborah Tarn Steiner, who is a philologist, and two grandchildren.
If the Dancer Dances is reminiscent of witnessing a philologist or literary translator at play, trying to get into the mindset of someone who works in a different language.
In the American context, merchants of hatred hardly need to look to a nineteenth-century German philologist for inspiration: they can draw on older and deeper wells at home.
Svetlana Boym, a Russian-American philologist, has described this as the "historical emotion" of modernity, and argued that attempts to create a "phantom homeland" through ahistorical restoration would only breed monstrous consequences.
The younger Marc, who thought of being either a minister or a philologist before taking up painting, adopted an approach to art that was intellectually driven and, until he met Macke, fairly lonely.
At the time, the character of Lieutenant Uhura, played by Nichelle Nichols, was so vital for African-Americans — the black woman of the future as an accomplished philologist — that, as Nichols told NPR, the Rev.
Some 2,500 years ago, the Indian philosopher and philologist Panini produced a grammar for Sanskrit that not only fully described the existing language but created a way to generate new Sanskrit words, as if by algorithm.
This view of the relationship between language and literature, informed by Tolkien's professional life as a philologist and professor of English at Oxford, was the engine that drove him both as a scholar and as a writer.
" Although not alone in this practice, Tolkien was the first philologist to establish such a network of evolving dialects that derive from one another "by slowly accumulating changes and divergences in form across time from a common ancestor species.
"I did philological work, as if I were studying the attribution of an ancient text, even though it's a modern text," added Mr. Santagata, a philologist by training and an expert on Petrarch and Dante who teaches at the University of Pisa.
Rami's wife, Nurit Peled-Elhanan, is an award-winning philologist, academic and peace activist; Salwa Aramin, mother of six, is a mystery, though when she appears in this book, she's fascinating: possessed of a teasing sense of humor, intellectual curiosity, fierce purpose, deep grief.
But his gifts were certified by an Irish scholar and a British philologist, Charles William Russell and Thomas Watts, who set a standard for fluency that is still useful in vetting the claims of modern Mezzofantis: Can they speak with an unstilted freedom that transcends rote mimicry?
He received a doctorate in 15th-century Persian poetry from the University of Tehran and then studied ancient Iranian languages under the German philologist Walter Bruno Henning at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, where Professor Yarshater completed a second doctorate.
So when a "surprisingly good-looking" Italian philologist named Ludovico Bembo (Ludo, for short) meets her at the Barcelona airport, he shoulders her suitcase full of books and shakes her determination to exist via thought and abstraction, to paraphrase (as Zebra does) the French philosopher and literary theorist Maurice Blanchot.
The second, the daringly loose-limbed, "all night between my breasts," originated at another address in Berkeley: Alter adopted it from "The Song of Songs," a 1995 book by Chana and Ariel Bloch, a poet and philologist translation team, for which he wrote the afterword and which he footnotes in his own translation.
In 1970, he married the author and German philologist, Naira Gelashvili. Their daughter, Anna, also is a German philologist. Margwelaschwili died in Tbilisi on 13 March 2020.
She is married to the classical philologist Thomas A. Schmitz.
Nicholas Fuller (c. 1557 - 1626) was an English Hebraist and philologist.
Heinrich Theodor Dittrich (;. -19th century) was a German philologist and librarian..
Diego Catalán (16 September 1928 – 9 April 2008) was a Spanish philologist. He was the grandson of famed philologist, Ramón Menéndez Pidal, and María Goyri de Menéndez Pidal. Catalán died of heart disease on 9 April 2008, at the age of 83. Catalán was the son of Miguel Catalán Sanudo and Jimena Menéndez Pidal, and therefore the grandson of philologist Ramón Menéndez Pidal.
Edmund Hauler (17 November 1859, in Buda – 1 April 1941, in Vienna) was an Austrian classical philologist born in Ofen to a Danube Swabian German family. His father, Johann Hauler (1829–1888) was also a classical philologist.
Luca Serianni () (born 30 October 1947) is an Italian linguist and philologist.
Jacopo Facciolati Jacopo Facciolati (1682–1769) was an Italian lexicographer and philologist.
Henry Cecil Kennedy Wyld (1870-1945) was a notable English lexicographer and philologist.
Eugene O'Curry (, 20 November 179430 July 1862) was an Irish philologist and antiquary.
Albert Schultens Albert Schultens (; 22 August 168626 January 1750) was a Dutch philologist.
Her father is also the great-grandson of the German philologist Konrad Duden.
Uvo Hölscher (8 March 1914 - 31 December 1996) was a German classical philologist.
Angelo Paggi ( – ), born Mordecai Paggi, was an Italian Jewish Hebraist, philologist and educator.
Alvard Petrossyan (, born October 4, 1946) is an Armenian writer, philologist and publicist.
Winfried Bühler (11 June 1929 – 14 February 2010) was a German classical philologist.
Jon Gisle (born 19 November 1948) is a Norwegian jurist, encyclopedist and philologist.
Erwin Reifler (; 16 June 1903 - 23 April 1965) was an Austrian comparative philologist.
Christian-Joseph Guyonvarc'h (1926, Auray - 9 January 2012, Bohars) was a French philologist.
Heinz Wismann (b. 1935 in Berlin) is a Franco-German philologist and philosopher.
Eter Tataraidze (; ; born 15 March 1956) is a Georgian poet, folklorist and philologist.
Enrica Malcovati (21 October 1894 - 4 January 1990) was an Italian Classical philologist.
John Oxlee (1779–1854) was an English cleric, philologist and writer on theology.
Petar Draganov (Russian: Петар Драганов, 1857 - 1928) was a Russian philologist and slavist.
Friedrich Wilhelm August Mullach (; 1807–1882) was a German philologist and Byzantine scholar.
Eiliv Skard (19 October 1898 - 30 September 1978) was a Norwegian classical philologist.
John Trotter Brockett (1788-1842), was a British attorney, antiquarian, numismatist, and philologist.
His great grand uncle was the notable Estonian philologist and physician Friedrich Robert Faehlmann.
Johann Christoph Adelung (8 August 173210 September 1806) was a German grammarian and philologist.
George Reid John Peile (24 April 1838 – 9 October 1910) was an English philologist.
Mateo Aimerich (1715–1799) was a philologist born in Bordils, Province of Girona, Spain.
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Freytag (19 September 1788 - 16 November 1861) was a German philologist.
Nashwān ibn Saʻīd al-Ḥimyarī () was a Yemeni theologian, judge, philologist, poet and historian.
Jean Auguste Ulric Scheler (1819–1890), also styled Auguste Scheler was a Belgian philologist.
August Immanuel Bekker (21 May 17857 June 1871) was a German philologist and critic.
Ainsworth O’Brien-Moore (June 7, 1897 – December 31, 1936) was an American classical philologist.
Rowland Jones (1722–1774) was a Welsh lawyer and philologist of radical linguistic views.
Sevda Mikayilova (born January 20, 1953 in Baku) is an Azerbaijani philologist and poet.
Alice Freda Braunlich (February 1, 1888 - August 9, 1989) was an American classical philologist.
Julia Harwood Caverno (December 19 1862 – February 4, 1949) was an American classical philologist.
She was also praised in poetry by the scholar, cartographer, and philologist Adriaan Reland.
Jordi Rubió i Balaguer (Barcelona, 1887 – Barcelona, 1982) was a Catalan philologist and librarian.
Elizabeth Solopova is a British philologist and medievalist undertaking research at New College, Oxford.
Eduardo de Almeida Navarro, also known as Eduardo Navarro, is a Brazilian philologist and lexicographer.
Friedrich Adolf Trendelenburg (30 November 1802 – 24 January 1872) was a German philosopher and philologist.
Bengt Ivar Hesselman (1875–1952) was a Swedish linguist and philologist, specialising in Scandinavian languages.
Nicolai Henrich Jæger (28 January 1780 – 13 July 1846) was a Norwegian lawyer and philologist.
Elias Molee (January 3, 1845 – September 27, 1928) was an American journalist, philologist and linguist.
Johannes Peder Ejler Pedersen (1883–1977) was a Danish Old Testament scholar and Semitic philologist.
Hellmut Flashar (; born 3 December 1929 in Hamburg) is a German classical philologist and translator.
Reinhold F. Glei (; born 11 June 1959 in Remscheid) is a German philologist and translator.
Fran Bradač (June 15, 1885 – May 2, 1970) was a Slovene classical philologist and translator.
Heinz-Günther Nesselrath Heinz-Günther Nesselrath (9 November 1957 in Rödingen) is a German philologist.
Georg von Laubmann (3 October 1843 - 5 June 1909) was a German philologist and librarian.
Richard Price (1790–1833) was a British barrister, known as philologist, antiquarian, and literary editor.
Helmut Huchzermeyer (28 December 1904 – 1 March 1984) was a German philologist, musicologist and composer.
Johann Christoph Wichmannshausen (October 3, 1663 – January 17, 1727) was a 17th-century German philologist.
Leiva Petersen (28 November 1912 - 17 April 1992) was a German classical philologist and publisher.
Nikola Andrić (5 July 1867 – 7 April 1942) was a Croatian writer, philologist and translator.
Wilhelm Scherer (26 April 18416 August 1886) was a German philologist and historian of literature.
Johann Christoph Wilhelm Ludwig Döderlein (19 December 1791 – 9 November 1863) was a German philologist.
Lazarus Geiger (21 May 1829 – 29 August 1870) was a German Jewish philosopher and philologist.
Georg Friedrich Creuzer (; 10 March 1771 – 6 February 1858) was a German philologist and archaeologist.
Hermann Wilhelm Breymann (3 July 1842 – 6 September 1910) was a German philologist and pedagogue.
Johann was the father of the philologist Johann Christoph Wilhelm Ludwig Döderlein, known as Ludwig.
Trygve Knudsen (23 June 1897 - 18 January 1968) was a Norwegian philologist, linguist and lexicographer.
Klairi Angelidou () (born November 19, 1932) is a Cypriot educator, philologist, poet, translator, and politician.
Carlo Ottavio Castiglioni. Count Carlo Ottavio Castiglioni (1784-1849) was an Italian philologist and numismatist.
Serge Lancel (5 September 1928 – 9 October 2005) was a French archaeologist, historian and philologist.
Bernhard Rudolf Abeken (December 1, 1780 - February 24, 1866) was a German philologist and literature historian.
Moriz Haupt. Moriz or Moritz Haupt (27 July 1808 – 5 February 1874), was a German philologist.
William Foxwell Albright (1891–1971) was an American archaeologist, biblical scholar, philologist, and expert on ceramics.
Johann Gottfried Reiff () was a German philologist. He published an edition of Artemidorus's Oneirocritica in 1805.
Matthew Rader (also Matthäus, or Mathaeus) (1561 - 22 December 1634) was a Jesuit philologist and historian.
Robert Nares (9 June 1753, York - 23 March 1829) was an English clergyman, philologist and author.
Johann Philipp Palthen (26 June 1672 – 26 May 1710) was a Western Pomeranian historian and philologist.
Joseph Anselm Feuerbach (9 September 1798 – 8 September 1851) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist.
Jakob Sverdrup Jakob Sverdrup (10 April 1881 – 21 November 1938) was a Norwegian philologist and lexicographer.
In 1910s Tirayr Ter-Hovhannisyan, famous Armenian churchman, poet, philologist and translator served as vicar here.
Henri Auguste Omont (15 September 1857 – 9 December 1940) was a French librarian, philologist, and historian.
Josef Kroll (8 November 1889 - 8 March 1980) was a German classical philologist and university rector.
Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker (4 November 1784 – 17 December 1868) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist.
Conrad Bursian Conrad Bursian (; 14 November 1830 – 21 September 1883) was a German philologist and archaeologist.
Arkady Rzegocki is married to English philologist and theatre historian Jolanta Rzegocka. They have three daughters.
Vincenzo Di Benedetto (12 January 1934 - 19 or 20 July 2013) was an Italian classical philologist.
His brothers were Julius Müller (1801–1878), a theologian, and Eduard Müller (1804–1875), a philologist.
Arthur Ernest Gordon (October 7, 1902 -- May 11, 1989) was an American classical philologist and epigraphist.
Antonio Tovar Llorente (17 May 1911 – 13 December 1985) was a Spanish philologist, linguist and historian.
Jean Bollack (15 March 1923 – 4 December 2012) was a French philosopher, philologist and literary critic.
Edelestand Pontas du Méril (26 March 1801 – 24 May 1870) was a French medievalist and philologist.
His wife was Maria Łowmiańska (1899-1961), Polish philologist with historical interests, also graduate from USB.
Ernst Höpfner (3 June 1836, Rawitsch - 28 February 1915, Göttingen) was a German educator and philologist.
Macrobius 3.12.6. Kaster 1995:121. Rawson 1985:52. Ateius the Philologist was another of his pupils.Suetonius. Gram.
Immanuel Gottlieb Huschke (8 January 1761, Greußen, Schwarzburg-Sondershausen - 18 February 1828) was a German classical philologist.
Emil Reisch (28 September 1863, Vienna - 13 December 1933, Vienna) was an Austrian classical philologist and archaeologist.
Takis Dimopoulos ( Greek:Τάκης Δημόπουλος, Pyrgos, Greece, 1898 – Athens, Greece 1981 ) was a Greek essayist, novelist and philologist.
Emil Schreiner. Emil Theodor Schreiner (26 November 1831 – 15 November 1910) was a Norwegian philologist and educator.
Married to Elena Stepanova – philologist, theater critic, pedagogue. Children: Rufina (born 1977.), journalist; Margarita (born 1988), architect.
Louise Adams Holland (3 July 1893-21 June 1990) was a philologist, university teacher, academic and archaeologist.
William Henry Carpenter (1853, Utica, New York - 1936) was an American philologist, and provost for Columbia University.
Carl Darling Buck (October 2, 1866 – February 8, 1955), born in Bucksport, Maine, was an American philologist.
Johann Ludwig Uhland (26 April 1787 – 13 November 1862) was a German poet, philologist and literary historian.
Ezra Fleischer (; 14 July 1928 – 25 July 2006) was a Romanian-Israeli Hebrew- language poet and philologist.
Friedrich Wagenfeld (January 3, 1810 - August 26, 1846) was a German philologist and author born in Bremen.
Shikhali Gurban oglu Gurbanov (; 1925, Baku—May 24, 1967, Baku) was an Azerbaijani writer, philologist and statesman.
Fausto Carlos Barreto (December 19, 1852 – October 2, 1915) was a Brazilian philologist, journalist, professor and politician.
August Ferdinand Michael van Mehren (April 6, 1822 – 14 November 1907 ) was a Danish Orientalist and philologist.
Eliyahu "Elye" Spivak (, ; 10 December 1890 – 4 April 1950) was a Soviet Jewish linguist, philologist, and pedagogue.
Georg Gustav Fülleborn (2 March 1769 – 6 February 1803) was a German philosopher, philologist and miscellaneous writer.
Johan Ihre Johan Ihre (3 March 1707 - 1 December 1780) was a Swedish philologist and historical linguist.
François Arnaud (Comtat-Venaissin, 27 July 1721 – 2 December 1784) was a French clergyman, writer, and philologist.
Agustín García Calvo (October 15, 1926 - November 1, 2012) was a Spanish philologist, philosopher, poet and playwright.
Grzegorz Knapski Grzegorz Knapski (Knapiusz, Cnapius; 1561–1639) was a Polish Jesuit, teacher, philologist, lexicographer and writer.
Peterolsen Groth Hjalmar Seierstedt Falk (April 2, 1859 - November 2, 1928) was a Norwegian linguist and philologist.
Peter von Matt (2008) Peter von Matt (born 20 May 1937) is a Swiss philologist and author.
Gustav Friedrich Konstantin Parthey (27 October 1798 – 2 April 1872) was a German philologist and art historian.
Heinrich Rudolf Dietsch (16 March 1814 in Mylau - 29 December 1875 in Stötteritz) was a German philologist.
Marju Lepajõe (28 October 1962 - 4 July 2019) was an Estonian classical philologist, translator and religious historian.
Franz Miklosich (also known in Slovene as ; 20 November 1813 – 7 March 1891) was a Slovene philologist.
Rasmus Nyerup (12 March 1759-28 June 1829) was a Danish literary historian, philologist, folklorist and librarian.
Ciriaco Morón Arroyo Ciriaco Morón Arroyo (b. Pastrana, 8 August 1935) is a Spanish philologist and professor.
Karl Wilhelm August Reifferscheid (3 October 1835 – 10 November 1887) was a German archaeologist and classical philologist.
Augusto Mancini Augusto Mancini (2 March 1875 - 18 September 1957) was an Italian philologist, Hellenist and politician.
Stjepan Musulin (1885 in Sremska Mitrovica - 1969) was a Croatian linguist, comparative Slavicist, philologist, lexicographer and translator.
Naira Gelashvili () (born 28 October 1947) is a Georgian fiction writer, philologist, Germanist, and civil society activist.
Hans Gram Hans Gram (28 October 1685– 19 February 1748) was a Danish academic, philologist and historian.
George Giuglea (January 29, 1884 - April 7, 1967) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian linguist and philologist.
Vigfusson's work was parallelled by the far more thorough researches of the eminent Norwegian philologist, Sophus Bugge.
Johann Heinrich Joseph Düntzer (July 12, 1813 – December 16, 1901) was a German philologist and historian of literature.
Anne Elizabeth Baker (16 June 1786 – 22 April 1861) was a philologist, historian and illustrator of Northampton, England.
Johan Peter Weisse in 1881. Johan Peter Weisse (13 August 1832 – 7 March 1886) was a Norwegian philologist.
Ludvig Cæsar Martin Aubert Ludvig Cæsar Martin Aubert (30 March 1807 – 14 June 1887) was a Norwegian philologist.
This is a list of the published works of the English writer and philologist J. R. R. Tolkien.
Boris Andreevich Uspenskij () (born 1 March 1937, in Moscow) is a Russian linguist, philologist, semiotician, historian of culture.
Richard Cleasby (1797–1847) was an English philologist, author with Guðbrandur Vigfússon of the first Icelandic-English dictionary.
Edwin Whitfield Fay (January 1, 1865, Minden, Louisiana - February 17, 1920, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) was a United States philologist.
Valentí Fàbrega i Escatllar (Barcelona, 1931) is a Catalan Philologist and Theologian, who lives since 1971 in Cologne.
Oswald Ashton Wentworth Dilke (26 April 1915 – 10 July 1993) was a classical scholar and philologist from England.
Vladimir Ivanov Georgiev (Bulgarian: Владимир Иванов Георгиев) (1908–1986) was a prominent Bulgarian linguist, philologist, and educational administrator..
Bernhard Egidius Konrad ten Brink (12 January 1841 in Amsterdam29 January 1892 in Strasbourg) was a German philologist.
Hana Librová is a sister of prof. Jana Nechutová, classical philologist. She is married and has a daughter.
Jeremy J. Smith is a British philologist who is Professor of English Philology at the University of Glasgow.
Johann Rudolf Suter (29 March 1766, Zofingen - 24 February 1827, Bern) was a Swiss physician, botanist and philologist.
Steinar Schjøtt, 1872. Steinar Schjøtt (13 November 1844 - 11 January 1920) was a Norwegian educator, philologist and lexicographer.
Karl Ludwig Reinhardt (February 14, 1886, Detmold – January 9, 1958, Frankfurt am Main) was a German classical philologist.
Möbius died in Leipzig in 1868 at the age of 77. His son Theodor was a noted philologist.
Christian August Brandis Christian August Brandis (13 February 179021 July 1867) was a German philologist and historian of philosophy.
Johann Georg Baiter. Johann Georg Baiter (May 31, 1801 – October 10, 1877) was a Swiss philologist and textual critic.
Ludwig Rübekeil (born 1958) is a German philologist who is Professor of Germanic philology at the University of Zurich.
Theodor Wisén (1835-92) Theodor Wisén (31 March 1835 – 15 February 1892) was a Swedish philologist of Scandinavian languages.
Theodor Möbius (June 22, 1821 Leipzig - April 25, 1890) was a German philologist who specialized in old Norse works.
Reuel Anson Lochore (25 February 1903 – 22 August 1991) was a New Zealand public servant, diplomat, scholar, and philologist.
Wendelin Förster (10 February 1844 – 18 May 1915, often written as Foerster) was an Austrian philologist and Romance scholar.
Friedrich Hiller von Gaertringen (3 August 1864 - 25 October 1947) was a German archeologist and philologist in classic epigraphy.
Garegin Srvandztiants Garegin or Karekin Srvandztiants (; November 17, 1840November 17, 1892) was an Armenian philologist, folklorist, ethnographer, and ecclesiastic.
Selma Ergeç (; 1 November 1978) is a Turkish-German actress, beauty pageant titleholder, model, designer, philologist, psychologist and doctor.
Olof von Feilitzen (31 August 1908 – 29 June 1976) was a Swedish philologist who specialised in Old English names.
Ernst Moritz Ludwig Ettmüller (5 October 180215 April 1877), German philologist, was born at Gersdorf near Löbau, in Saxony.
Johan Nicolai Madvig Johan Nicolai Madvig (; 7 August 1804 – 12 December 1886), was a Danish philologist and Kultus Minister.
Edward Yechezkel Kutscher or Yechezkel Kutscher (; 1 June 1909 – 12 December 1971) was an Israeli philologist and Hebrew linguist.
Richard Morris (8 September 1833 – 12 May 1894), was an English philologist and priest of the Church of England.
Pedro Henríquez Ureña (June 29, 1884 – May 11, 1946) was a Dominican essayist, philosopher, humanist, philologist and literary critic.
Dr Peter Giles (20 October 1860 - 17 September 1935) was a Scottish philologist and Master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge.
Wilhelm August Ritter von Hartel (28 May 1839 - 14 January 1907) was an Austrian philologist specializing in classical studies.
Seiichi Suzuki (born 1956) is a Japanese philologist who is Professor of Old Germanic Studies at Kansai Gaidai University.
Alexis Peter Vlasto (14 November 1915 – 20 July 2000) was a British historian and philologist, specialising in Slavonic studies.
Ivan von Müller (20 May 1830 in Wunsiedel, Bavaria - 20 July 1917 in Munich) was a German classical philologist.
William Binnington Boyce (9 November 1804 – 8 March 1889) was an English-born philologist and clergyman, active in Australia.
Alfred Ernout (; Lille, 30 October 1879 – Paris, 16 June 1973) was a French philologist, specialized in the Latin language.
Claude Charles Fauriel Claude Charles Fauriel (21 October 1772 – 15 July 1844) was a French historian, philologist and critic.
Hugo Blümner (9 August 1844, in Berlin – 1 January 1919, in Zürich) was a German classical archaeologist and philologist.
James Morgan Hart. James Morgan Hart (November 2, 1839 – April 18, 1916) was an American academic, philologist and translator.
Francesco Bonaini Francesco Bonaini (Livorno, July 20, 1806 - Collegigliato, August 28, 1874) was a philologist, paleographer and Italian archivist.
Wilhelm Meyer-Lübke (; 30 January 1861 – 4 October 1936) was a Swiss philologist of the Neogrammarian school of linguistics.
Hermann Hirt (19 December 1865 in Magdeburg – 12 September 1936 in Gießen) was a German philologist and Indo-Europeanist.
Carl Otto Lagercrantz (26 February 1868 – 13 January 1938) was a Swedish classical philologist and rector of Uppsala University.
Gustav Roethe (1859–1926) Gustav Roethe (5 May 1859, Graudenz - 17 September 1926, Bad Gastein) was a German philologist.
David Mortier Eduard Fraenkel (17 March 1888 in Berlin – 5 February 1970 in Oxford) was a German-British philologist.
Jean Baptiste Lefebvre de Villebrune (Senlis, Oise, 1732 – Angoulême, 7 October 1809) was a French philologist, physician and translator.
In the Space Trilogy by C.S. Lewis, the main character, Elwin Ransom, is a philologist - as was Lewis' close friend J. R. R. Tolkien. Dr. Edward Morbius, one of the main characters in the science- fiction film Forbidden Planet, is a philologist. Philip, the main character of Christopher Hampton's 'bourgeois comedy' The Philanthropist, is a professor of philology in an English university town. Moritz-Maria von Igelfeld, the main character in Alexander McCall Smith's 1997 comic novel Portuguese Irregular Verbs is a philologist, educated at Cambridge.
Swedish philologist Lars Johanson and Azerbaijani philologist Elbrus Azizov does not name Yerevan dialect in their classification of Azerbaijani language dialects.Azerbaijanian — L. Johanson (Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany, 2006.), pp. 112–113. // Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World. Coordinating editor — Keith Brown (University of Cambridge), co–editor — Sarah Ogilvie (University of Oxford).
Karl August Baumeister (24 April 1830, in Hamburg – 22 May 1922, in Munich) was a German educator and classical philologist.
Thereafter Zaehner held Prof. Bailey in high esteem.Zaehner called Prof. Bailey "perhaps the greatest Indo-Iranian philologist of our time".
His educational teachings considerably influenced the philologist Konrad Duden, whose work was decisive for the standardization of the German Orthography.
Peter Ernst von Lasaulx. Peter Ernst von Lasaulx (; March 16, 1805 – May 9, 1861) was a German philologist and politician.
German philologist Elisabeth Leiss regards construction grammar as regress, linking it with the 19th century social darwinism of August Schleicher.
Rudolf Heberdey (10 March 1864. Ybbs an der Donau - 7 April 1936, Graz) was an Austrian classical philologist and archaeologist.
Francisque Xavier Michel Francisque Xavier Michel (18 February 1809, Lyon – 18 May 1887, Paris) was a French historian and philologist.
Gudmund Schütte (17 January 1872– 12 July 1958) was a Danish philologist, historian and writer who specialized in Germanic studies.
Oswald A.W. Dilke, son of Clement Wentworth Dilke, younger brother of the fourth Baronet, was a classical scholar and philologist.
Pietro Fanfani (21 April 1815, in Pistoia, Italy – 4 March 1879, in Florence) was an Italian philologist, humorist and novelist.
Victor Henry (; 17 August 1850 in Colmar, Alsace6 February 1907 in Sceaux) was a French philologist, specializing in Indian languages.
Braak is the son of the philologist Professor Ivo Braak (1906–1991) and brother of theatre director Dr. Kai Braak.
Théophile Homolle Jean Théophile Homolle (19 December 1848, Paris – 13 June 1925, Paris) was a French archaeologist and classical philologist.
200px Jean-André Cuoq (1821–1898) was a Roman Catholic priest and a philologist in the Algonquin and Mohawk languages.
Like Arendt, Anne would go on to become a philosopher, obtaining her doctorate at Hamburg, while Ernst became a philologist.
Hermann Reichert (born 7 April 1944) is an Austrian philologist at the University of Vienna who specializes in Germanic studies.
Sigmund Moren (27 November 1913 - 4 February 1996) was a Norwegian philologist, encyclopedist, literary critic, theatre critic and children's writer.
Theodor Bergk Theodor Bergk (22 May 1812 – 20 July 1881) was a German philologist, an authority on classical Greek poetry.
Albert Henry (Grand-Manil, 20 March 1910 – Nancy, 22 February 2002) was a Belgian Romance philologist and a Walloon activist.
Samson Eitrem (28 December 1872 – 8 July 1966) was a Norwegian philologist, an expert in ancient literature, religion and magic.
His maternal grandfather was Ralph Lilley Turner, director of the School of Oriental Studies and a philologist of Indian languages.
Isaías D'Oleo Ochoa (alternatively spelled Isaias Doleo Ochoa) (born December 23, 1980) is a Costa Rican philologist, poet and editor.
Nicolay Milberg Stang (21 April 1908 - 15 July 1971) was a Norwegian academic art historian, classical philologist, editor and author.
C. Alphonso Smith (May 28, 1864 – June 13, 1924) was an American Professor of English, college dean, philologist, and folklorist.
Portrait of Forby in the Norwich Castle Museum (c.1802), artist uncertain. Robert Forby (1759-1825), was an English philologist.
Matthaios K. Paranikas (; 1832-1914) was a Greek scholar, philologist teacher and writer of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Johann Christian Felix Baehr (lithograph, 1843) Johann Christian Felix Baehr (June 13, 1798 – November 29, 1872) was a German philologist.
Vidhva Shiromani Brahma Sri C. Ganesha Iyer (1 April 1878 – 8 November 1958) was a Ceylonese Tamil philologist from Jaffna.
Robert Atkinson (6 April 1839 – 10 January 1908) was an Anglo-Irish academic, known as a philologist and textual scholar.
Péter Szondi (; May 27, 1929, Budapest – November 9, 1971, Berlin) was a celebrated literary scholar and philologist, originally from Hungary.
Wilhelm (William) Dittenberger (August 31, 1840 in Heidelberg – December 29, 1906 in Halle (Saale)) was a German philologist in classical epigraphy.
Belén Bermejo Meléndez (1969 – 27 June 2020) was a Spanish publisher and philologist. Bermejo died on 27 June 2020 of cancer.
Johann Andreas Benignus Bergsträsser (21 December 1732, in Idstein – 24 December 1812, in Hanau) was a German educator, philologist, and entomologist.
Ardashes Der-Khachadourian (; 1931–1993) was an Armenian diasporan linguist, bibliographer, philologist, historian, periodicals and book collector, lexicographer, grammatist, and editor.
Jacques Gousset (Latinized as Gussetius; 1635–1704) was a French Protestant theologian and philologist, after 1685 in exile in the Netherlands.
Maria Dolors Bramon Planes (born 31 December 1943) is a Spanish philologist, historian, and university professor specializing in the Muslim world.
Anders Platou Wyller in the 1930s Anders Platou Wyller (24 April 1903 - 2 October 1940) was a Norwegian philologist and humanist.
Maurice Bloomfield Maurice Bloomfield, Ph.D., LL.D. (February 23, 1855 – June 12, 1928) was a Polish-born American philologist and Sanskrit scholar.
Walther Kranz (; November 23, 1884 in Georgsmarienhütte – September 18, 1960 in Bonn) was a German classical philologist and historian of philosophy.
Eugene Numa Lane (August 13, 1936 in Washington, DC – January 1, 2007, Columbia, MO) was an American classical philologist and archaeologist.
Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu ( 26 February 1838 - ) was a Romanian writer and philologist, who pioneered many branches of Romanian philology and history.
Johann Peter Julius Hoffory (9 February 1855, Aarhus - 12 April 1897, Westend) was a Danish-German philologist, phonetician, and Germanic scholar.
Viktor Vladimirovich Vinogradov (; - 4 October 1969) was a Soviet linguist and philologist who presided over Soviet linguistics after World War II.
Hermann Köchly Hermann Köchly (born Leipzig, 5 August 1815; died Trieste, 3 December 1876) was a German philologist and educational reformer.
Renée Kahane (née Toole, 9 December 1907 in Argostolion, Greece – 10 December 2002 in Chicago) was a Romance philologist and linguist.
Ljubomir Stojanović (, sometimes mentioned as Ljuba Stojanovic) (6 August 1860, Užice – 16 June 1930) was a Serbian politician, philologist and academic.
Stefan Brink (born 1952) is a Swedish philologist affiliated with the Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge.
Wilhelm Paul Corssen (20 January 182018 June 1875) was a German philologist noted for his work on Latin and Etruscan topics.
Dmitri Rudolf Peacock (26 September 1842 – 23 May 1892), born in Russia, was a philologist, diplomat and explorer of the Caucasus.
Firmin Le Ver, in Latin Firminus Verris, (between 1370 and 1375 – Abbeville, 1444) was a French Carthusian monk, philologist, and lexicographer.
Nicolae Drăganu Nicolae Drăganu (18 February 1884 – 18 December 1939) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian linguist, philologist and literary historian.
Fredrik Wulff. Fredrik Amadeus Wulff (February 11, 1845 in Gothenburg - December 31, 1930 in Lund) was a Swedish phonetician and philologist.
Matthias Martin Tischler (born March 18, 1968 in Münchberg, Bavaria) is a German palaeographer, philologist and historian, stemming from a multinational and -confessional family with Austrian, Bohemian, French and Hungarian origins. He is married to the Catalan philologist and linguist Eulàlia Vernet i Pons and lives with his family in L'Ametlla del Vallès, Barcelona and Münchberg, Bavaria.
Otto Keller, 1898 at Prague Otto Keller (28 May 1838 in Tübingen - 16 February 1927 in Ludwigsburg) was a German classical philologist who specialized in Horace. He also wrote a landmark two volume work on animals in antiquity. He was often called as "Horace Keller" to differentiate him from his father Adelbert von Keller who was also a philologist.
Scherer's literary activity falls into three categories: in Vienna was the philologist, at Strasbourg the professor of literature and Berlin the author. His earliest work was a biography of the philologist Jakob Grimm (1865, 2nd ed. 1885); the next, in conjunction with his former teacher Müllenhoff, published Denkmäler deutscher Poesie und Prose aus dem 8. bis 12.
Henry Sweet (15 September 1845 – 30 April 1912) was an English philologist, phonetician and grammarian.Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language, as hosted on encyclopedia.com As a philologist, he specialized in the Germanic languages, particularly Old English and Old Norse. In addition, Sweet published works on larger issues of phonetics and grammar in language and the teaching of languages.
Petar "Pero" Budmani (; 27 October 1835 – 27 December 1914) was a writer, linguist, grammarian, and philologist from Dubrovnik and a renowned polyglot.
Johann Albrecht Widmannstetter, also called Widmannstadt, Johannes Albertus or Widmestadius, (1506 – 28 March 1557) was a German humanist, orientalist, philologist, and theologian.
Bridges' preface to his English-Yámana manuscript notes that he used the Ellis Phonetic System, developed by Alexander John Ellis, a philologist.
James Hadley (30 March 1821 – 14 November 1872) was a United States philologist who taught Greek and Hebrew languages at Yale College.
Arnold Wall (15 November 1869 - 29 March 1966) was a New Zealand university professor, philologist, poet, mountaineer, botanist, writer and radio broadcaster.
Jehan Desanges (born 3 January 1929, in Nantes) is a French historian, philologist and epigrapher, a specialist of North Africa during Antiquity.
Daniel Gotthilf Moldenhawer (11 December 1753 – 21 November 1823), was a German-Danish philologist, theologian, librarian, bibliophile, palaeographer, diplomat, and Bible translator.
Johann von Kelle (March 15, 1828 in Regensburg - January 30, 1909 in Prague) was a German philologist who studied the German language.
Anne Lill (born 15 October 1946) is an Estonian classical philologist and translator. She is Professor Emeritus at the University of Tartu.
Philologist Graciete Nogueira Batalha (1925–1992) published a number of papers on the language. A Macanese-Portuguese glossary was published in 2001.
Theodor Wilhelm Braune (February 20, 1850 in Großthiemig, Province of Saxony – November 10, 1926 in Heidelberg) was a German philologist and Germanist.
Miguel Antonio Caro Tobar (November 10, 1845 – August 5, 1909) was a Colombian scholar, poet, journalist, philosopher, orator, philologist, lawyer, and politician.
Panos G. Rontoyannis (Alternate spelling Rontogannis , June 20, 1911 in Lefkas - December 26, 1996 in Athens) was a philologist-historian of Lefkas.
Sophokles: Trauerspiele translated by Friedrich Ast Georg Anton Friedrich Ast (; 29 December 1778 – 31 December 1841) was a German philosopher and philologist.
Ivan Vladimirovich Tsvetaev (; 16 May 1847, Shuya, Ivanovo Oblast – 12 September 1913, Moscow) was a Russian art historian, archaeologist and Classical philologist.
Lev Ivanovich Zhirkov (; 7 March 1885 – 4 December 1963) was a Russian Soviet philologist, specializing in Persian and Caucasian languages, and Esperantist.
Théodore Claude Henri, vicomte Hersart de la Villemarqué (7 July 1815 – 8 December 1895) was a Breton philologist and man of letters.
Pavel Dmitrievich Golohvastov (Russian: Павел Дмитриевич Голохвастов, 27 February 1838 – 16 July 1892) was a Russian writer, historian, philologist, publicist, and slavophile.
Rebecca Posner (née Reynolds; 17 August 1929 – 19 July 2018) was a British philologist, linguist and academic, who specialized in Romance languages.
Denis Sauvage (1520–1587) was a French translator, historian, publisher, philologist, and historiographer at the service of Henry II of Henri II.
Arsène Darmesteter Arsène Darmesteter (5 January 1846, Château-Salins, Moselle16 November 1888, Paris) was a distinguished French philologist and man of letters.
Portrait from Illustrated London News, 28 January 1865 William Balfour Baikie (27 August 182512 December 1864) was a Scottish explorer, naturalist and philologist.
Pietro Vettori in a 16th-century drawing. Piero Vettori (Latin: Petrus Victorius) (1499 – 8 December 1585) was an Italian writer, philologist and humanist.
Kovačević is a graduate philologist. Now retired, he is based in the Belgrade municipality of Zemun.BORISAV KOVAČEVIĆ, Otvoreni Parlament, accessed 9 October 2017.
Jean-Baptiste de La Curne de Sainte-Palaye (June 1697, Auxerre – 1 March 1781, Paris) was a French historian, classicist, philologist and lexicographer.
María Rosa Alonso (pseudonym, María Luisa Villalba; December 28, 1909 - May 27, 2011) was a Spanish professor, philologist, essayist from the Canary Islands.
Théodore Reinach (3 July 1860 – 28 October 1928) was a French archaeologist, mathematician, lawyer, papyrologist, philologist, epigrapher, historian, numismatist, musicologist, professor, and politician.
As a philologist, he made his mark with the first Greek concordance to the New Testament which he published at Basel in 1546.
Alessandro Lami (Rosignano Marittimo, 27 January 1949 - 8 March 2015)Knut Hamsun – Per i sentieri dove cresce l’erba was an Italian classical philologist.
Karl Wilhelm Göttling. Karl Wilhelm Göttling (Latin: Carolus Guilielmus Goettling; January 19, 1793 – January 20, 1869) was a German philologist and classical scholar.
His father was German classical philologist Johannes Vahlen (1830–1911). Theodor studied in Berlin from 1889 and received his doctorate there in 1893.
Jakob Markus Schipper (19 July 1842 Augustgroden (today part of Stadland) - 20 January 1915 Vienna) was a German-Austrian philologist and English scholar ().
His niece, Mykhailyna Khomivna Kotsiubynska (1931), is the Ukrainian philologist and literary specialist. She is an honorary doctor of the Kyiv Mohyla Academy.
Christopher R. Fee is an American philologist and medievalist. He is Professor of English and Chair of the English Department at Gettysburg College.
Peter Olrog Schjøtt Photo: Ludwik Szacinski de Ravics Peter Olrog Schjøtt (29 July 1833 – 7 January 1926) was a Norwegian philologist and politician.
Graham Dunstan Martin (Leeds, United Kingdom, 1932)“Martin, Graham Dunstan” The Encyclopedia of the Science Fiction is a British author, translator, and philologist.
Joseph de Jouvancy (also Jouvency; Latinised Josephus Juvencius) (14 September 1643 – 29 May 1719 Rome ) was a French poet, pedagogue, philologist, and historian.
Charles Dédéyan (4 April 1910 – 21 June 2003) was a French Romance philologist, literature comparatist and specialist of French literature of Armenian origin.
Fotios Malleros Kasimatis (1914–1986) was a Greek historian, philologist and scholar specialist in Byzantinology. His academic career was mainly developed in Chile.
Fernand Mossé (25 May 1892 – 10 July 1956) was a 20th-century French philologist and historian, specialized in Germanic languages and German literature.
Folmer Wisti (May 8, 1908 – October 16, 2000) was a Danish director, associate professor and philologist. He was the first Slavic philologist from Aarhus University. Wisti was the instigator and leader of the Danish Cultural Institute (originally Danish Society) from 1940 to 1983. In 1974, he founded the Foundation for International Understanding, today known as the Folmer Wisti Foundation for International Understanding.
Zoya Konstantinovna Basharina () (born May 21, 1945) is a Yakut literary critic, philologist, and academic, known especially for her work in the Yakut language.
Alexander Nikolayevich Senkevich (, born 1941) is a Russian Indologist, philologist, translator from Hindi, writer, and poet. Also he is known as Helena Blavatsky's biographer.
Johann Michael Dilherr (14 October 1604 - 8 April 1669) was a German Protestant theologian and philologist at the universities of Jena and Atldorf (Nuremberg).
Arshag Chobanian (; 15 July 1872 - 9 June 1954), was an Armenian short story writer, journalist, editor, poet, translator, literary critic, playwright, philologist, and novelist.
Eduard Wölfflin (1 January 1831, Basel - 8 November 1908, Basel) was a Swiss classical philologist. He was the father of art historian Heinrich Wölfflin.
Christian Frederick Matthaei (4 March 1744, in Mücheln – 26 September 1811), a Thuringian, palaeographer, classical philologist, professor first at Wittenberg and then at Moscow.
Horatio Hale, a philologist who took part in the United States Exploring Expedition led by Charles Wilkes, made the first description of their language.
Georg Wissowa (1859-1931) Georg Otto August Wissowa (17 June 1859 – 11 May 1931) was a German classical philologist born in Neudorf, near Breslau.
Sava Mrkalj (; ) (1783–1833) was a Serb linguist, grammarian, philologist, and poet known for his attempt to reform the Serbian language before Vuk Karadžić.
Sesto Prete Sesto Prete (September 27, 1919 in Montefiore dell'Aso - June 15, 1991 in Cagli, Italy) was an Italian-born American philologist and paleographer.
Gregorios N. Bernardakis (, translit. Grigorios N. Vernardakis, Neolatin Gregorius N. Bernardakis, b. Mytilene 1848, d. 1925) was a Greek philologist, palaeographer, and university professor.
Albrecht Dieterich (1866-1908) Albrecht Dieterich (May 2, 1866 – May 6, 1908) was a German classical philologist and scholar of religion born in Hersfeld.
Karl Zell Karl Zell (8 April 1793 - 24 January 1873) was a German statesman, philologist, and defender of the rights of the Catholic Church.
Rudolf Ernst Brünnow (February 7, 1858 in Ann Arbor, Michigan; – April 14, 1917 in Bar Harbor, Maine) was a German-American orientalist and philologist.
Jan Gruter Jan Gruter or Gruytère, Latinized as Janus Gruterus (3 December 1560 – 20 September 1627), was a Flemish-born philologist, scholar, and librarian.
While in Washington in 1961 he met the Italian philologist Anna Morpurgo, and married her the following year. The marriage was dissolved in 1978.
His brother, Robert Gregg Bury, was an Irish clergyman, classicist, philologist, and a translator of the works of Plato and Sextus Empiricus into English.
William Witherle Lawrence (1876 − July 25, 1958) was an American philologist who served as Professor of English at Columbia University from 1905 to 1936.
Dragutin Anastasijević (Kragujevac, July 30, 1877 – Belgrade, August 20, 1950) was Serbian byzantinist and philologist, a member of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
Arthur Biram, 1928 Arthur Biram Arthur Yitzhak Biram (Hebrew: ארתור בירם; August 13, 1878 - June 5, 1967) was an Israeli philosopher, philologist, and educator.
The United States Geological Survey says something similar, citing Richard H. Geoghegan, a philologist, who said the native word referred to a wild raspberry.
Wolfgang Preisendanz (April 28, 1920 – September 29, 2007) was a German philologist and literary critic. Preisendanz was the winner of the 1988 Kassel Literary Prize.
A careful text edition alongside a detailed description of the literary and cultural-historical context was published by the Dutch philologist Hans Ras in 1968.
Frederik Christian von Haven (26 June 1728 - 25 May 1763) was a Danish philologist and theologian who took part in the Danish expedition to Yemen.
He graduated in 1932. However, the person who influenced him the most was his uncle Yang Shuda (杨树达), also a well-known philologist.
Eva Henriette Sachs (13 April 1882 – September 1936)Eva Henriette Sachs was a German classical philologist, whose dissertation reconceptualized the relation between Theaetetus and Plato.
Charles Hall Grandgent (born November 14, 1862 in Dorchester, Massachusetts; died September 11, 1939 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an American romance philologist and Italian scholar.
Nastasă (2007), pp. 327–328 Meanwhile, Negulescu had a personal conflict with philologist Ilie Bărbulescu, intervening to have him denied employment at Iași.Nastasă (2007), pp.
Oleg Bilorus has two children, his son Igor (b. 1968) is an economist, daughter Irina (b. 1969) is a philologist, has a PhD in law.
Jonathan Boucher, c1790 Rev. Jonathan Boucher (pronounced Boo-Shay), FRSE, FSA (12 March 1738 – 27 April 1804) was an English clergyman, teacher, preacher and philologist.
Rodolfo Oroz (8 July 1895 – 13 April 1997) was a Chilean writer, professor, and philologist. He won the Chilean National Prize for Literature in 1978.
Gottfried Bernhardy (20 March 1800 - 14 May 1875), German philologist and literary historian, was born at Landsberg an der Warthe (now Poland) in the Neumark.
Frederick Bodmer (actually Friedrich Bodmer) (14 February 1894 – 2 January 1960) was a Swiss philologist and author of the popular book The Loom of Language.
Stassinopoulos married Eftichia "Effie" Pappaioannou, a philologist and archaeologist, on 16 July 1950. They had one daughter and three grandchildren. Effie passed away in 2013.
Gerhard Adam Neuhofer (16 January 1773 – 12 December 1816) was a German deacon, teacher, philologist, historian and poet. He was born and died in Augsburg.
Clérac is a commune in the Charente-Maritime department in southwestern France. The historian and philologist James Germain Février (1895–1976) was born in Clérac.
Johann von Wowern was a German statesman, philologist, and lawyer. He is known for his 1603 work De Polymathia tractatio: integri operis de studiis veterum.
His wife, Svetlana Krasnoselskaya, is a philologist, and is also a Russian language teacher. He has one son, Ivan, and two daughters, Genevieve and Sofia.
Kurt Latte (9 March 1891, Königsberg – 8 June 1964, Tutzing) was a German philologist and classical scholar known for his work on ancient Roman religion.
Feliks (Felix) Kibbermann (3 December 1902, in Rakvere - 27 December 1993, in Tartu) was an Estonian chess master, philologist of German language, lexicographer and pedagogue.
They were re-edited several times after that, reaching their present form in 1957 thanks to the extensive research of Portuguese philologist Manuel Rodrigues Lapa.
Imprinted lettering in Adlansky book (pre-1918) Pavel Ivanovich Alandsky (; – ) was a Russian classical philologist and historian who specialized in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome.
Sadīd ud-Dīn Muhammad Ibn Muhammad 'Aufī Bukhārī (1171-1242) (), also known under the laqab Nour ud-Dīn, was a Persian historian, philologist, and author.
Gunnar Rudberg Gunnar Rudberg (17 October 1880 – 6 August 1954) was an internationally renowned Swedish classical philologist. He was the father of geomorphologist Sten Rudberg.
One of Olha's brothers, Stepan Yulianovych, became a painter-portraitist, another, Yulian Yulianovych, became a philologist and was the author of several textbooks in Latin.
Wilhelm Nestle (; 16 April 1865, Stuttgart – 18 April 1959, Stuttgart) was a German philologist and philosopher.Andreas Schneck. Wilhelm Nestle 1913–1919. In Kolbeck, Alfred (ed.).
Concepció Ferrer Casals (born 27 January 1938) is a Spanish philologist, teacher and politician, the Second Deputy Defender of the People of Spain since 2012.
Fritz Schöll (ca. 1880) Friedrich (Fritz) Schöll (8 February 1850 in Weimar - 14 September 1919 in Rottweil) was a German classical philologist, known for his editions of Plautus, Varro and Cicero. He was the son of archaeologist Gustav Adolf Schöll (1805–1882) and the brother of philologist Rudolf Schöll (1844–1893). He studied at the universities of Göttingen and Leipzig, obtaining his habilitation in 1876.
Ludvig Henrik Ferdinand Oppermann (September 7, 1817 – August 17, 1883) was a Danish mathematician and philologist who formulated Oppermann's conjecture on the distribution of prime numbers.
Eugen Kölbing (1846-1899) was a German philologist, a specialist in the study of Nordic, English, and French language and literature and comparative linguistics and literature.
Max Radin (March 29, 1880 – June 22, 1950 ) was an American legal scholar, philologist, and author. The noted anthropological scholar Paul Radin was his younger brother.
Prof Edward William Prevost FRSE FIC (1851-1920) was a 19th-century British chemist, philologist and linguist. In authorship he is known as E. W. Prevost.
Kristian Kaalund Peter Erasmus Christian Kaalund (19 August 1844 - 4 July 1919; also spelled Kristian or Kålund) was a Danish philologist who specialized in Scandinavian studies.
Wacław Cimochowski (December 22, 1912 in Kursk – July 4, 1982 in Gdynia, Poland) was a Polish philologist who specialized in Indo-European linguistics, especially in Albanology.
Robert Dennis Fulk (born October 2, 1951) is an American philologist and medievalist who is Professor Emeritus of English and Germanic Studies at Indiana University Bloomington.
Donald Woodward Lee (April 17, 1910 − May 31, 1977) was an American philologist who served until 1975 as Professor of English at the University of Houston.
Arthur Garfield Kennedy (June 29, 1880 − April 21, 1954) was an American philologist who served as Professor of English at Stanford University from 1914 to 1945.
Robert Nedoma (born 1961) is an Austrian philologist who is Professor at Department for Scandinavian Studies at the University of Vienna. He specializes in Germanic studies.
Portrait of Willems by Felix Timmermans (1937) Léonard Willems (1864–1938) was a Flemish philologist from Brussels, Belgium, who was active in academic circles in Ghent.
Ivar Eskeland (30 November 1927 - 23 December 2005) was a Norwegian philologist, publisher, translator, biographer, literary critic, newspaper editor, theatre worker, radio personality and organizational leader.
Rafael Ishkhanyan or Ishkhanian (, 9 March 1922 – 6 February 1995) was an Armenian linguist, philologist and historian. He was a professor of the Yerevan State University.
Hans Krahe (7 February 1898 - 25 June 1965) was a German philologist and linguist, specializing over many decades in the Illyrian languages. He was born at Gelsenkirchen.
Johann Jakob Breitinger, in an engraving after Johann Kaspar Füssli Johann Jakob Breitinger (1 March 1701 in Zürich; 14 December 1776) was a Swiss philologist and author.
Otto Jahn in 1850s. Otto Jahn (; 16 June 1813 in Kiel – 9 September 1869 in Göttingen), was a German archaeologist, philologist, and writer on art and music.
Joseph Wright FBA (31 October 1855 – 27 February 1930) was an English philologist who rose from humble origins to become Professor of Comparative Philology at Oxford University.
Helmut Kirchmeyer and his wife Eva in Darmstadt, 2005 Helmut Franz Maria Kirchmeyer (born 30 June 1930 in Düsseldorf, Germany) is a German musicologist, philologist and historian.
Jost Trier (15 December 1894 – 15 September 1970) was a German philologist who was Chair of German Philology at the University of Münster from 1932 to 1961.
Anne Elizabeth Pennington (1934-1981) was a British philologist specialising in Slavic studies. She was particularly interested in songs as well as the development of the language.
Lidia Kulikovski married engineer Victor Kulikovski in 1976. They have two daughters: one of them is a philologist and lives in Spain, the other is a marketologist.
Nikolai Trofimovich Fedorenko () (, Pyatigorsk - October 2, 2000) was a Soviet philologist, orientalist, statesman, public figure, professor (1953), and corresponding member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (1958).
Grigore Nandriș (born January 17, 1895, Mahala - d. March 2, 1968, Kew, United Kingdom) was a Romanian linguist, philologist and memorialist, professor at Chernivtsi, Kraków and Oxford.
Classical philologist Georg Wissowa maintained that the ritual of the Salii is a war dance or a sword dance, with their costumes clearly indicating their military origin.
Nérondes is a commune in the Cher department in the Centre-Val de Loire region of France. The philologist Antoine Cabaton (1863–1942) was born in Nérondes.
Leo Karl Heinrich Meyer (3 July 1830 – 6 June 1910) was a German philologist who spent much of his career in the Governorate of Livonia (now Estonia).
Alexander Macbain (or Alexander MacBain) (22 July 1855 – 4 April 1907) was a Scottish philologist, best known today for An Etymological Dictionary of the Gaelic Language (1896).
The species is named for Frederik Christian von Haven, the philologist member of the Danish expedition to Arabia Felix (Yemen) in the middle of the eighteenth century.
Edmund Max Stengel (April 5, 1845 in Halle – November 3, 1935 in Marburg) was a Romance philologist who specialized in studies and editions of Chanson de geste.
Heinrich Lausberg (12 October 1912 in Aachen; died 11 April 1992 in Münster) was a German rhetorician, classical philologist and historical linguist specialising in Romance studies. His 1960 treatise Handbook of literary rhetoric,Leiden, Brill, 1988. is considered one of the most complete and detailed summaries of classical rhetoric from the perspective of Quintillian's four operations.Groupe µ (1970) A General Rhetoric, Introduction His daughter, Marion Lausberg, is a classical philologist, too.
Gunnar Haarberg (28 July 1917 - 1 October 2009Verdens Gang: Norges første tv- kjendis er død (no)) was a Norwegian philologist, teacher, radio- and television personality. Haarberg was born in Trondheim. He was a philologist, teacher, radio personality and was called Norway's first television celebrity. For a few years, he taught English at the Norwegian police academy Haarberg was also an English teacher, and wrote several books on the subject.
He has been a professor at the Charles III University of Madrid since 2000. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Tor Vergata (Rome, Italy), Franche- Comté (France) and Potsdam (Germany). He is the older brother of Alfredo Alvar Ezquerra of the Spanish National Research Council and the younger brother of Carlos Alvar Ezquerra, Romanic philologist. Their father was Manuel Alvar Ezquerra, prominent Spanish philologist.
Besim Bokshi (; 1930-2014) was an Albanian poet, linguist and philologist. He served as the president of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of Kosovo during 2008-2011.
Also a philologist and linguist, he possessed notions of Greek, Latin and other languages. He also studied the native Latin American languages, especially the Mapuche, Quechua and Aymará.
Hambro is the daughter of philologist Carl Joachim Hambro and granddaughter of Conservative politician Carl Joachim Hambro, and is a member of the family that established Hambros Bank.
Pitești: Editura Paralela 45, 2004. His teachers there included philologist Constantin Vardalah. Immersed in Greek culture, he had virtually no understanding of written Romanian until 1828.Călinescu, p.
Mikheil Kurdiani (; 1 January 1954, Tbilisi – 31 October 2010, Tbilisi) was a Georgian philologist, linguist, writer, poet and translator. He was a head man of the Rustaveli Society.
Henry Bradley, FBA (3 December 1845 – 23 May 1923) was a British philologist and lexicographer who succeeded James Murray as senior editor of the Oxford English Dictionary (OED).
Gustave Guillaume Gustave Guillaume (16 December 1883 – 3 February 1960),Profile of Gustave Guillaume was a French linguist and philologist, originator of the linguistic theory known as "psychomechanics".
The couple's children included poet, classicist, philologist, and psychic researcher Frederic W. H. Myers (1843–1901), poet Ernest Myers (1844–1921) and Dr Arthur Thomas Myers (1851–1894).
At this time the Moule family were also friendly with the Reverend William Barnes, the Dorset poet and philologist who also acted as a mentor to Thomas Hardy.
Francesco D'Ovidio (Campobasso, 5 December 1849 – Naples, 24 November 1925) was an Italian philologist and literary critic. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature four times.
Julius Zupitza (4 January 1844 in Kerpen, Upper Silesia - 6 July 1895 in Berlin) was a German philologist and one of the founders of English philology in Germany.
Louis Marie Olivier Duchesne (; 13 September 1843 – 21 April 1922) was a French priest, philologist, teacher and a critical historian of Christianity and Roman Catholic liturgy and institutions.
Luo Zhenyu or Lo Chen-yü (August 8, 1866 - May 14, 1940), courtesy name Shuyun (叔蘊), was a Chinese classical scholar, philologist, epigrapher, antiquarian and Qing loyalist.
His son, Ferdinand Dümmler (1859–1896), an archaeologist and philologist, was professor at the University of Basel from 1890 until his death on 15 November 1896, aged 37.
Anna Julia Komorowska (born 11 May 1953) is a Polish classical philologist and former First Lady of Poland, as the wife of 5th President of Poland, Bronisław Komorowski.
Constantin Regamey (28 January 1907 – 27 December 1982) was a philologist, orientalist, musician, composer, and critic."Kompozytorzy I Autorzy, Konstanty Regamey, Biogram." PWM. Polskie Wydawnictwo Muzyczne, 2013. Web.
Alf Hellevik (28 June 1909 - 8 November 2001) was a Norwegian philologist. He was born in Fjaler. He graduated as cand.philol. from the University of Oslo in 1938.
Teena Rochfort-Smith (22 September 1861 – 4 September 1883) was a Victorian Shakespearean scholar and philologist most notable for her contributions to the form of the scholarly edition.
Malachia Ormanian Malachia Ormanian (; 11 February 1841 – 19 November 1918) was the Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople from 1896 to 1908. He was also a theologian, historian, and philologist.
Jacob Henderson was an Irish clergyman and philologist who emigrated to the colonial Provinces of Pennsylvania, then Maryland, where he became a prominent land owner and church leader.
Anne Vibeke Roggen (born 1 February 1952) is a Norwegian philologist, known for her translations from Latin and among the country's foremost experts on the humanist Niels Thomessøn.
Robert Gregg Bury (22 March 1869 – 11 February 1951) was an Irish clergyman, classicist, philologist, and a translator of the works of Plato and Sextus Empiricus into English.
Ermenegildo Pistelli (February 18, 1862Inscription on a plaque (visible on Commons) placed at his birthplace in Camaiore. – January 14, 1927) was an Italian papyrologist, palaeographer, philologist and presbyter.
He married teacher Celestina Vigneaux i Cibils and fathered philologist Joan Coromines i Vigneaux, mathematician Ernest Corominas i Vigneaux, psychologist Júlia Coromines i Vigneaux and five other children.
August Buchner (2 November 1591 – 12 February 1661) was a German philologist, poet and literary scholar, an influential professor of poetry and rhetoric at the University of Wittenberg.
Michel Jules Alfred Bréal (; 26 March 183225 November 1915), French philologist, was born at Landau in Rhenish Palatinate. He is often identified as a founder of modern semantics.
Firidun bey Kocharli Firidun bey Ahmad bey oglu Kocharli or Kocharlinski (; or ) (26 January 1863, in Shusha – 1920, in Ganja) was a prominent Azerbaijani writer, philologist and literary critic.
Francesco Benozzo Francesco Benozzo (born 22 February 1969) is an Italian poet, musician and philologist. He works as a Research Fellow in Philology at the University of Bologna, Italy.
Gábor Döbrentei Gábor Döbrentei (1 December 1785 – 28 March 1851) was a Hungarian philologist and antiquary.Magyar életrajzi lexikon I. (A–K). Főszerk. Kenyeres Ágnes. Budapest: Akadémiai. 1967. 394. o.
Charles Kraitsir (born Károly Krajtsir, 28 January 1804 in Szomolnok, Hungary (today Smolník, Slovakia) – 7 May 1860 in Morrisania, New York) was a Hungarian-American philologist of Polish descent.
Váceslav Hanka Wooden inn from about 1720 where Hanka was born Vyšehrad Cemetery Wenceslaus Hanka Czech: Vác(es)lav Hanka (10 June 179112 January 1861) was a Czech philologist.
Philologist Christopher Beckwith has identified the three terms used here by Pyrrho - adiaphora, astathmēta, and anepikrita - to be nearly direct translations of anatta, dukkha, and anicca into ancient Greek.
Aristotle, ap. Harpocrat. s. v. German philologist Philipp Karl Buttmann places this hero in the period between the so-called return of the Heraclids and the age of Peisistratus.
'Abd al-Qadir ibn 'Umar al-Baghdadi (; 1030–1093 AH / 1620–1682 AD) was an author, philologist, grammarian, magistrate, bibliophile and a leading literary encyclopedist of the Ottoman era.
Paul Hamelius or Hamélius (1868–1922) was a Belgian philologist who produced the two-volume Early English Text Society edition of the Travels of Sir John Mandeville (1919, 1923).
Olof Alfred Gigon (28 January 1912 – 18 June 1998) was a Swiss classical philologist. He is particularly known as a historian of philosophy and translator of ancient philosophical texts.
Izmail Sreznevsky in 1854. Izmail Ivanovich Sreznevsky (; 13 June 1812, Yaroslavl – 21 February 1880, St. Petersburg) was a Russian Imperial and Ukrainian philologist, Slavist, historian, paleographer, folklorist and writer.
Al-Ṭuwāl the Grammarian (), surnamed Abū ‘Abd Allāh (), or Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad ibn ‘Abd Allāh (). Al-Ṭuwal the Grammarian was a ninth-century philologist of the School of Kūfah.
Valentín García Yebra (Lombillo de Los Barrios, Ponferrada, León, 28 April 1917 – Madrid, 13 December 2010),Scholar Valentín García Yebra died was a Spanish philologist, translator and translation scholar.
Jernej Kopitar, also known as Bartholomeus Kopitar (21 August 1780 – 11 August 1844), was a Slovene linguist and philologist working in Vienna. He also worked as the Imperial censor for Slovene literature in Vienna. He is perhaps best known for his role in the Serbian language reform started by Vuk Stefanović Karadžić, where he played a vital role in supporting the reform by using his reputation and influence as a Slavic philologist.
Georg Heinrich Lünemann (3 September 1780, Göttingen - 8 January 1830, Göttingen) was a German classical philologist and lexicographer. His younger brother, Johann Heinrich Christian Lünemann (1787-1827), was also a classical philologist. He studied classical philology at the University of Göttingen, and in 1803 succeeded Georg Friedrich Grotefend as an instructor of Greek and Latin at the gymnasium in Göttingen. He is best known for his revised editions of Immanuel Johann Gerhard Scheller's Latin dictionaries.
Christopher I. Beckwith (born 1945) is an American philologist and distinguished professor in the Department of Central Eurasian Studies at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. He has a B.A. in Chinese from Ohio State University (1968), an M.A. in Tibetan from Indiana University (1974) and a Ph.D. in Inner Asian Studies from Indiana University (1977). Beckwith, a MacArthur Fellow,MacArthur Foundation, "Christopher Beckwith, Philologist", 1986. is a researcher in the field of Central Eurasian studies.
Heinrich Schenkl (29 January 1859, Innsbruck - 3 December 1919, Vienna) was an Austrian classical philologist. He was the son of classical philologist Karl Schenkl. From 1876 to 1880 he studied classical philology, archaeology and philosophy at the University of Vienna, where his instructors included Theodor Gomperz and Wilhelm von Hartel. For several years he worked as a gymnasium teacher in Vienna, and in 1892 became an associate professor at the University of Graz.
Gustav Gröber (4 May 1844 in Leipzig - 6 November 1911 in Ruprechtsau near Strasbourg) was a German Romance philologist. Picture of Gustav Gröber, Romance philologist and professor He received his education at Leipzig, taught at Zurich (1871–74), and later became professor at Breslau and the University of Strassburg. His principal work was in Romance literature and linguistics. His student, Ernst Curtius, dedicated his classic study, “ European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages” to Gröber.
Félix Ramos y Duarte (1848–1924), a philologist and educator, remembered above all for his Diccionario de mejicanismos (Dictionary of Mexican Spanish), was born in San José de Los Ramos.
In Mark Nuttall (editor). Encyclopedia of the Arctic. Vol 1,2 and 3. pp. 585-586 Originally, a Eskimologist or Inuitologist was primarily a linguist or philologist who researches Eskimology scholar.
Mario Roques (1 July 1875 – 8 March 1961) was a French scholar, professor of history of medieval literature and renowned Romance philologist. He translated and edited Le Roman de Renart.
Versions of Zakarpattia philologist Pavlo Chuchka:Чучка Павло. Прізвища закарпатських українців: Історико-етимологічний словник. — Львів: Світ, 2005. # From South Slavic ancestor's male name Luta using a suffix -ak as patronymic one.
Friedrich Feuerbach. Friedrich Heinrich Feuerbach (29 September 1806 – 24 January 1880) was a German philologist and philosopher. In the 1840s he played an important role disseminating materialist and atheist philosophy.
Bernhard Bischoff (20 December 1906 – 17 September 1991) was a German historian, paleographer, and philologist; he was born in Altendorf (administrative division of Altenburg, Thuringia), and he died in Munich.
Friedrich Leo (1851-1914) Friedrich Leo (July 10, 1851 – January 15, 1914) was a German classical philologist born in Regenwalde, in the then-province of Pomerania (present-day Resko, Poland).
Annie Bélis is a French archaeologist, philologist, papyrologist and musician. She is a research director at the French CNRS, specialized in music from classical antiquity, Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome.
Patricia Esteban Erlés (Zaragoza, 1972) is a Spanish philologist and short story writer. She has won a number of major awards and her work has been included in several anthologies.
Karl Müllenhoff. Karl Viktor Müllenhoff (born September 8, 1818, in Marne, Duchy of Holstein; died February 19, 1884, in Berlin) was a German philologist and a student of Germanic antiquities.
Clement Anderson Akrofi (1901–1967) was an ethnolinguist, translator and philologist who worked extensively on the structure of the Twi language under the aegis of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana.
Family grave at the Hörnli cemetery, Riehen, Basel-Stadt Rudolf Tschudi (born 2 May, 1884 in Glarus, died 11 October 1960 in Basel) was a Swiss philologist, historian, and Orientalist.
John Walker's grave, Old St Pancras Churchyard, London John Walker (18 March 1732, in Colney Hatch, Middlesex – 1 August 1807, in London) was an English stage actor, philologist and lexicographer.
Anton Janežič, 1861 Anton Janežič, also known in German as Anton Janeschitz (19 December 1828 – 18 September 1869) was a Carinthian Slovene linguist, philologist, author, editor, literary historian and critic.
Ahmad Zaki Pasha (, ; 26 May 1867 – 5 July 1934) was an Egyptian philologist, sometimes called the "Dean of Arabism" () or "Shaikh al-Orouba ", and longtime secretary of the Egyptian Cabinet.
Rudolf Schottlaender (August 5, 1900 in Berlin, German Empire – January 4, 1988 in East Berlin, East Germany) was a German philosopher, classical philologist, translator and political publicist of Jewish descent.
Jakob Franck (18 February 1811 - 17 September 1884) was a German philologist and teacher who contributed more than 300 biographical entries to the German General Biographical Dictionary ("Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie").
Radoslav Katičić (; 3 July 1930 – 10 August 2019) was a Croatian linguist, classical philologist, Indo-Europeanist, Slavist and Indologist, one of the most prominent Croatian scholars in the field of humanities.
Volodymyr Petrovych Shaian (2 August 1908 – 15 July 1974) was a Ukrainian linguist, philologist and Orientalist-Sanskritologist. He was a pioneer of Slavic Native Faith in Ukraine during the interwar period.
Johan Fredrik Breda Storm Johan Fredrik Breda Storm (24 November 1836 - 26 October 1920) was a Norwegian professor, linguist and philologist. He is known for his development of the Norvegia transcription.
This Russian and Finnish philologist notes that sometimes in the Slavic languages the Greek term "τύχη" (týchi, "luck") is translated as rod, and "είμαρμένη" (eímarméni, "destiny") is translated as a rozhanitsa.
Nicola Zingarelli. Nicola Zingarelli (; August 31, 1860 -- June 6, 1935) was an Italian philologist, the founder of the Zingarelli Italian dictionary. He was born in Cerignola (Apulia) and died in Milan.
The main character in the Academy Award Nominee for Best Foreign Language film in 2012, Footnote, is a Hebrew philologist, and a significant part of the film deals with his work.
Alphonse Roersch (1870–1951) was a Belgian philologist, professor at the University of Ghent.Louis Bakelants, Nécrologie: Alphonse Roersch (1870-1951), Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire, 29 (1951), pp. 999-1001.
Kazimierz Zdziechowski, also known under pseudonyms Władysław Zdora, Władysław Mouner, (1878–1942) was a Polish landowner, prose writer, publicist, literary critic and novelist. Brother of Marian Zdziechowski, Polish philologist and philosopher.
Ludwig Gottfried Blanc (19 September 1781 – 18 April 1866) was a German philologist and Dante scholar.ADB:Blanc, Ludwig Gottfried In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Band 2, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1875, S. 688.
Friedrich August Grotefend (12 December 1798 in Ilefeld to 28 February 1836 in Göttingen) was a German philologist. Grotefend was a relative of Georg Friedrich Grotefend, who deciphered the cuneiform writing.
Theodor Willem Johannes Juynboll also: Theodorus Willem Johannes Juijnboll, Theodorus Guiliemus Johannes Juynboll (April 6, 1802 in Rotterdam - 16 September, 1861 in Leiden) was a Dutch Reformed theologian and oriental philologist.
Charles Forster Smith (born June 30, 1852 in Abbeville County, South Carolina, died August 3, 1931 in Racine, Wisconsin) was an American classical philologist, who particularly emerged as a Thucydides researcher.
Bettelou Los is a linguist and philologist specializing in the history of the English language. Since 2013 she has held the Forbes Chair of English Language at the University of Edinburgh.
Carl Ivar Orgland (13 October 1921 – 16 June 1994) was a Norwegian philologist, lexicographer, translator and poet. He is especially known for his work with Icelandic culture, and language and literature.
According to German philologist Gerhard Doerfer, Yerevan dialect belongs to southern group of Azerbaijani language, along with Nakhchivan and Ordubad dialects.Fascicle 3. — VIII. Azeri Turkish (author G. Doerfer), pp. 245–248.
Antal Bartal in 1872 Antal Bartal (Banská Bystrica, 24 April 1829 — Dunaharaszti, 6 September 1909) was a Hungarian lexicographer and philologist. He was a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
Karl Friedrich Christian Hoeck (born May 13, 1794 at Oelber am weißen Wege; died January 13, 1877 in Göttingen) was a German classical historian and philologist as well as a librarian.
Franz Volkmar Fritzsche (26 January 1806 in Steinbach bei Borna – 17 March 1887) was a German classical philologist. He was the son of theologian Christian Friedrich Fritzsche (1776-1850). He studied under philologist Gottfried Hermann (his future father-in-law) at the University of Leipzig, where in 1825 he received his habilitation. In 1828, he succeeded Immanuel Gottlieb Huschke (1761-1828) as professor of rhetoric and belles-lettres (teaching classes in classical literature) at the University of Rostock.
Franz Skutsch (1865-1912) Franz Skutsch (6 January 1865 - 29 September 1912) was a German classical philologist and linguist born in Neisse. He was the father of classical philologist Otto Skutsch (1906-1990). He studied classical philology and Indo-European studies at the Universities of Heidelberg and Breslau, where he was a student of Georg Wissowa (1859-1931). In 1888 he earned his doctorate at the University of Bonn, later obtaining his habilitation at Breslau in 1890.
Theophilus Herman Kofi Opoku (1842 – 7 July 1913) was a native Akan linguist, translator, philologist, educator and missionary who became the first indigenous African to be ordained a pastor on Gold Coast soil by the Basel Mission in 1872. Opoku worked closely with the German missionary and philologist Johann Gottlieb Christaller as well as fellow native Akan linguists, David Asante, Jonathan Palmer Bekoe, and Paul Staudt Keteku in the translation of the Bible into the Twi language.
Boyo Ockinga is an Egyptologist, epigrapher, and philologist of the ancient Egyptian language, who holds the position of Associate Professor in the Department of Ancient History at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia.
Mikhail Georgievich Khalansky () (1 November 1857 — 29 March 1910) was Russian Slavonic philologist and folklorist and corresponding member of the academy of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences since 5 December 1909.
Polish philologist Lucyjan Malinowski derives the similarly-sounding Polish term dziedziniec – "courtyard", from detinets.Lucyjan Malinowski, "Przyczynki do historii wyrazow polskich", Polska akademia umiejętności wydział filologiczny. Rozprawy i spawozwania, vol. X, 1884, p.
The Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu State University () is a public university in Cahul, Moldova, founded in 1999.University History It was named in honor of the Romanian writer and philologist Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu.
Georg Heinrich Bode (1802—1846) was a German classical philologist and translator. From 1820, he studied philology at the University of Göttingen. He published the three-volume Geschichte der hellenischen Dichtkunst (1838).
Enrico Alberto d'Albertis. Enrico Alberto d'Albertis (23 March 1846 – 3 March 1932) was an Italian navigator, writer, philologist, ethnologist and philanthropist. His cousin Luigi Maria d'Albertis was also an explorer and naturalists.
The great contribution to the work of it was done by the famous philologist H. Vasylkyvsky. That is why the museum was named in his honour.Г.І. Дудка, В.І. Ярешко Nizhyn. - Ніжин, 2003.
In a 2014 article on the claims, philologist Joseph S. Hopkins perceives the media response as an example of a broad revival of interest in the Viking Age and ancient Germanic topics.
Wilhelm Taubert in 1862. Carl Gottfried Wilhelm Taubert (23 March 1811 in Berlin – 7 January 1891 in Berlin) was a German pianist, composer, and conductor, father of philologist and writer Emil Taubert.
Lela Keburia (b. 21 September 1976, Zugdidi, Georgian SSR, USSR) is a Georgian politician and philologist. Member of Parliament of Georgia since 2016. She was born on 21 September 1976 in Zugdidi.
Conversely, other cognitive linguists claim to continue and expand Saussure's work on the bilateral sign. Dutch philologist Elise Elffers, however, argues that their view of the subject is incompatible with Saussure's own ideas.
Karl Lachmann. Karl Konrad Friedrich Wilhelm Lachmann (; 4 March 1793 – 13 March 1851) was a German philologist and critic. He is particularly noted for his foundational contributions to the field of textual criticism.
Linda Fierz-David (1891–1955) was a German philologist and one of the first Jungian analysts in Zurich.Kirsch, Thomas B. The Jungians: A comparative and historical perspective. 1st edition. Philadelphia: Routledge, 2000. Print.
Samuil Micu Klein Samuil Micu Klein (September 1745 – 13 May 1806) was a Romanian Greek-Catholic theologian, historian, philologist and philosopher, a member of the Enlightenment-era movement of Transylvanian School (Şcoala Ardeleană).
Aleksandr Ivanovich Yatsimirsky (; 1873 — 1925, Leningrad) was a Russian philologist-slavistic and a specialist in history of Romania and Moldavia. He was one of the authors of the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary.
Grigol Peradze, 1933 Saint Grigol Peradze () (St. Priest Martyr Grigol), (September 13, 1899 – December 6, 1942) was a prominent Georgian ecclesiastic figure, philologist, theologian, historian, and professor of patristics in the interwar period.
Gradisca d'Isonzo ( or Gardiscje, , archaic ) is a town and comune of the Province of Gorizia in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, north-eastern Italy. The lawyer, linguist, philologist Philippe Sarchi was born in Gradisca d'Isonzo.
Portrait by Gerhard von Kügelgen, 1808 Johann Karl Simon Morgenstern ( – ) was a German philologist in Livonia, the first director of the library of the Imperial University of Dorpat. He coined the term Bildungsroman.
Pavel Jozef Šafárik (; 13 May 1795 – 26 June 1861) was an ethnic Slovak philologist, poet, literary historian, historian and ethnographer in the Kingdom of Hungary. He was one of the first scientific Slavists.
His work as a philologist, mostly related to grammar, has made him one of the foremost experts in the field in his time. He was a corresponding member of the Institute of Ceará.
Larissa Ilinichna Volpert (; 30 March 1926 – 1 October 2017) was a Soviet chess Woman Grandmaster and Russian and Estonian philologist. She was a three time Soviet women's chess champion (1954, 1958, and 1959).
John Watson McCrindle (16 May 1825 - 16 July 1913, West Cliff-on-Sea) was a Scottish classical philologist and educator who wrote several major works on references to India in ancient classical writings.
Isidro Juan Palacios Tapias (born 1950) is a Spanish editor, author, philologist and teacher of oratory. Linked to the Nouvelle Droite (ND), he was a member of the now disbanded neo-nazi CEDADE.
Andrés Luciano Mateo Martínez (born 30 November 1946) is a Dominican writer, novelist, poet, philologist, educator, literary critic, essayist, researcher and philosopher. He was the winner of the National Literature Prize in 2004.
Volkmar Braunbehrens, Piper Verlag Braunbehrens is a former board member of the Humanist Union.Former board members, Humanistische Union He lives as a freelance author in Freiburg. His brother, , is a writer and philologist.
Nikolai Karl Adolf Anderson (24 September (6 October) 1845 in Kulina, Estonia – 9 (22) March 1905 in Narva, Estonia) was a Baltic German philologist who specialized in comparative linguistics of Finno-Ugric languages.
Giovanni Semerano (21 February 1913 – 20 July 2005) was an Italian philologist and linguist who studied the languages of Ancient Mesopotamia. He obtained his degree in Florence, where among his teachers were the Hellenist Ettore Bignone, the philologist Giorgio Pasquali, the semitist Giuseppe Furlani and the linguists Giacomo Devoto and Bruno Migliorini. At the beginning of his career he taught Greek and Latin in a high school. In 1950 he was appointed Supervisor of Bibliography for the Veneto and in 1955 for Tuscany.
Christian Friedrich Neue (1799-1886) Christian Friedrich Neue (19 December 1799, Spandau - 14 July 1886, Stuttgart) was a German classical philologist. He obtained his education in Berlin as a student of philologist August Boeckh. Beginning in 1820, he taught classes at Schulpforta. From 1831 to 1861, he was a professor of classical philology at the University of Dorpat,Google Books Nomenclator philologorum by Friedrich August EcksteinAugust-Boeckh- Nachlassprojekt biographical sketch where for several years he served as university rector (1836–1839, 1843–1851).
David Asante (23 December 1834 – 13 October 1892) was a philologist, linguist, translator and the first Akan native missionary of the Basel Evangelical Missionary Society. He was the second African to be educated in Europe by the Basel Mission after the Americo-Liberian pastor, George Peter Thompson. Asante worked closely with the German missionary and philologist, Johann Gottlieb Christaller and fellow native linguists, Theophilus Opoku, Jonathan Palmer Bekoe, and Paul Staudt Keteku in the translation of the Bible into the Twi language.
It was during the nineteenth century that modern-language studies became systematized. In the case of English, this happened first in continental Europe, where it was studied by historical and comparative linguists. In 1832, Danish philologist Rasmus Rask published an English grammar, Engelsk Formlære, part of his extensive comparative studies in the grammars of Indo-European languages. German philologist Jacob Grimm, the elder of the Brothers Grimm, included English grammar in his monumental grammar of Germanic languages, Deutsche Grammatik (1822-1837).
Notable faculty include Woodrow Wilson, chemists Arthur C. Cope and Louis Fieser, Arthur Lindo Patterson of the Patterson function, Edmund Beecher Wilson, philologists Catherine Conybeare, Grace Frank and Louise Holland, archaeologist Leicester Bodine Holland, Thomas Hunt Morgan, historian Caroline Robbins, mathematicians Emmy Noether and Lillian Rosanoff Lieber, classicists Richmond Lattimore, Tenney Frank and Lily Ross Taylor, the Spanish philosopher José Ferrater Mora, Germanic philologist Agathe Lasch, Classical philologist Wilmer Cave Wright, Hispanist and medievalist Georgiana Goddard King, and the poet Karl Kirchwey.
Heinrich Heydemann Heinrich Heydemann (28 August 1842, in Greifswald - 10 October 1889, in Halle an der Saale) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist, largely known for his studies of Greek and Roman vases. He studied classical philology and archaeology at the universities of Tübingen, Bonn, Greifswald and Berlin, receiving his doctorate at the latter institution in 1865. While a student, his influences were philologist Conrad Bursian, art historian Anton Springer and archaeologist Eduard Gerhard.Heydemann, Heinrich In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB).
Artashes Abeghyan (also Abeghian) ( 1 January 1878, Astabad, Nakhchivan – 13 March 1955, Munich) was an Armenian philologist, historian, educator, activist and politician. He graduated from Nersisian School. He taught at the University of Berlin.
He also became the vice-director of the institute. In 1921, he married philologist Maria Boreishe-Liverovsky (student of Zhirmunsky). She died two years later. In 1923, Nikolay married Maria's niece Natalia Nikolayevna Burtseva.
Leon Levițchi (27 August 1918 in Edineț, Hotin County, Kingdom of Romania – 16 October 1991 in Bucharest) was a Romanian philologist and translator who specialised in the study of the English language and literature.
Bonino Mombrizio (Mombritius) (1424 - between 1482 and 1502, perhaps 1500) was an Italian philologist, humanist, and editor of ancient writings. He was also a lawyer and a bureaucrat and the father of four daughters.
49, no. 1 (1977), pp. 129–130.Kenneth Cameron, "Obituary: Dr Olof von Feilitzen: Distinguished Swedish philologist", The Times, 27 July 1976, p. 14.Kungliga Bibliotekets årsberättelse [Royal Library Annual Report] (1976), p. i.
Hans Ernst Kinck (; 11 October 1865 – 13 October 1926) was a Norwegian author and philologist who wrote novels, short stories, dramas, and essays. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature seven times.
In addition to the smooth running, more teachers have joined the School: M.Pavlidou, M.Sotiraki (Philologist/Literature Teacher), H.Xatzinikolaou (Physicist), G.Stintixaki (German Language), E.Volonaki (Piano), A.Santoriniou (Piano), E.Ioannidou, P.Kouvaras, G.Kotis, S.Xatzinikolaou, Xatzipapas (Theatre), T.Athanasopoulos (Art).
Reinhard Breymayer (4 January 1944 – 13 August 2017)Death notice, Stuttgarter Zeitung, 18 August 2017 was a German philologist, researcher into pietism and specialist on the history of rhetoric. His published output is considerable.
"weak" terminology was coined by the German philologist Jacob Grimm in the 1800s, and the terms "strong verb" and "weak verb" are direct translations of the original German terms "starkes Verb" and "schwaches Verb".
In Milan, the Biblioteca Ambrosiana holds a manuscript copy of Virgil illuminated by Simone Martini; it belonged to Petrarch. A very precise catalogue of Petrarch's library was reconstructed by the Italian philologist Giuseppe Billanovich.
George Bariț George Bariț (4 June 1812 – 2 May 1893), often rendered as George Barițiu, was a Romanian historian, philologist, playwright, politician, businessman and journalist, the founder of the Romanian language press in Transylvania.
Gunnar Fougner Høst ca. 1930 Gunnar Fougner Høst (12 August 1900 – 5 August 1983) was a Norwegian philologist and literary historian. He was a lecturer at the University of Oslo from 1930 to 1968.
Warren Johansson (February 21, 1934 – June 10, 1994) was a philologist, author and a leading American gay scholar during his lifetime. He was founding member of the Scholarship Committee of the Gay Academic Union.
Schjøtt was born in Christiania, a daughter of Bernhard Dunker and Edle Jasine Theodore Grundt. She married the philologist and politician Peter Olrog Schjøtt in 1867, and they were the parents of Sofie Schjøtt.
Karja is a village in Saaremaa Parish, Saare County in western Estonia. Before the administrative reform in 2017, the village was in Leisi Parish. German philologist Kurt Treu (1928–1991) was born in Karja.
Francisco-Jesús Álvarez Curiel is a Spanish philologist and antiquarian perhaps best known for his work on popular Andalusian vocabulary. He writes in Spanish but his books have been translated into English and German.
Heinrich Wilhelm Josias Thiersch (November 5, 1817 – December 3, 1885), usually known as H. W. J. Thiersch, was a German philologist, initially a Protestant theologian, then minister in the short-lived Catholic Apostolic Church.
Alphonse Roque-Ferrier (1 August 1844 – 18 June 1907) was a French philologist and historian of the occitan language. He was a member of Félibrige. He argued for a union of Southern European countries.
Yuriy Ivanovich Venelin (; 22 September 1802 – 26 March 1839) was a Rusynian slavist, folklorist, ethnographer and philologist best known for his research on the language, history and culture of Bulgaria and the Bulgarian people.
Sir James Augustus Henry Murray, FBA (; 7 February 1837 – 26 July 1915) was a British lexicographer and philologist. He was the primary editor of the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) from 1879 until his death.
Albina Abramovna Goldman (, Suntarsky District, 4 September 1944) is the director of the Mirny Polytechnic Institute of the North-Eastern Federal University. She is a Russian philologist with a post-graduate degree in Philology.
Cerignola is the native town of philologist Nicola Zingarelli, founder of the Zingarelli Italian dictionary, and syndicalist Giuseppe Di Vittorio. Achille La Guardia, father of Fiorello LaGuardia, Mayor of New York, originated from here.
A portrait of Philip Rubens engraved by Cornelis Galle the Elder Philip Rubens (1574–1611), was an antiquarian, librarian and philologist from the Low Countries. His younger brother was the painter Peter Paul Rubens.
Franco Rocchetta in 2013. Franco Rocchetta (born Venice, 12 April 1947) is an Italian politician, entrepreneur, philologist and history populariser, who is usually described as the "father" of present-day Venetian nationalism and independentism.
Birger Nerman (6 October 1888 – 22 August 1971) was a Swedish philologist, archaeologist, historian, author and civic leader best known for his pioneering research on the archaeology of Iron Age Sweden and the eastern Baltic.
Nicolaus Delius Nicolaus Delius (19 September 1813 – 18 November 1888) was a German philologist. Delius was born at Bremen; he was distinguished especially as a student of Shakespeare and for his edition of Shakespeare's works.
Dilyara Alakbar qizi Aliyeva () (14 December 1929, in Tbilisi – 19 April 1991, in Qakh), Ph. D., was an Azerbaijani philologist, translator and Women's rights activist and Member of Supreme Council of Azerbaijan in 1990–1991.
Eugen Gustav Wilhelm Braunholtz (21 January 1859, Goslar – 8 February 1941, Cambridge ) was a German-born British philologist and scholar of French language and literature, known for his editorship of school editions of French classics.
4–10 April 2003. Print. Levan Begadze – German linguist, Georgian literary critic and philologist;Bregadze, Levan. He Had Read It. Newspaper "Akhali Epoqa" ("New Epoch"), insert "Chveni mtserloba" ("Our Literature"). 20–26 June 2003. Print.
Nares is buried in St. Margaret's, Westminster. His service in F and many of his anthems are still used in cathedrals. He was the father of Revd Robert Nares (1753–1829), the philologist and author.
Guram Sharadze () (17 October 1940 – 20 May 2007) was a Georgian philologist, historian, and politician. In 1995, he founded a small nationalist movement Ena, Mamuli, Sartsmunoeba ("Language, Homeland, Faith"). He was assassinated in downtown Tbilisi.
Maria Celina Dzielska (née Dąbrowska, September 18, 1942 – July 30, 2018) was a Polish classical philologist, historian, translator, biographer of Hypatia, and political activist. She was a Professor of Ancient Roman History at Jagiellonian University.
Herbert "Herbie" Coleridge (7 October 1830 – 23 April 1861) was an English philologist, technically the first editor of what ultimately became the Oxford English Dictionary. He was a grandson of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
David Mouradian (, December 12, 1951 in Yerevan, Armenia) is an Armenian philologist, writer, film critic and publicist. He is a lecturer at the Yerevan State University and the Institute of film and theater since 1986.
Santiago Posteguillo Gómez is a Spanish philologist, linguist and author, born in Valencia in 1967. He has become known for a number of novels set in Ancient Rome, especially his Scipio Africanus and Trajan trilogies.
Quintilian seems to refer to this work under Anaximenes' name in Institutio Oratoria,Quitilian, Institutio Oratoria 3.4.9 as the Italian Renaissance philologist Piero Vettori first recognized. This attribution has been disputed by some scholars however.
Oliver Farrar Emerson (born in Traer, Iowa, 24 May 1860; died in Ocala, Florida 13 March 1927) was a United States educator and philologist noted for Chaucer scholarship and his History of the English Language.
4–10 April 2003. Print. Levan Begadze – German linguist, Georgian literary critic and philologist;Bregadze, Levan. He Had Read It. Newspaper “Akhali Epoqa” (“New Epoch”), insert “Chveni mtserloba” (“Our Literature”). 20–26 June 2003. Print.
Bradina Toma Smiljanić (18 June 1888 in Tresonče, Ottoman Empire – 10 May 1969 in Belgrade, SFR Yugoslavia), known by his nickname Bradina, was Serbian ethnographer, philologist, dramatist and publicist from what is today North Macedonia.
Roberta Frank (born 1941) is an American philologist specializing in Old English and Old Norse language and literature. She is Marie Borroff Professor Emeritus of English, with a courtesy appointment in Linguistics, at Yale University.
Andrei Gusev lives in Moscow. He was married twice and divorced twice. The first wife – Nina Guseva (née Odnoletko), worked as a nurse; the second wife – Ivetta Sarkisyan, philologist by education. He has two daughters.
The earliest reference to slow reading appears to be in Nietzsche's preface to the 1887 Daybreak: "It is not for nothing that one has been a philologist, perhaps one is a philologist still, that is to say, a teacher of slow reading."Friedrich Nietzsche, (1887) Morgenro:te: Gedanken u:ber die moralischen Vorurteile (1881). "Man ist nicht umsonst Philologe gewesen, man ist es vielleicht noch, das will sagen, ein Lehrer des langsamen Lesens: - endlich schreibt man auch langsam."Nietzsche, Friedrich (1887)Daybreak: Thoughts on the Prejudices of Morality.
The first modern dialectal investigations of Kajkavian started at the end of the 19th century. The Ukrainian philologist A. M. Lukjanenko wrote the first comprehensive monograph on Kajkavian (titled Кайкавское нарѣчiе (Kajkavskoe narečie) meaning The Kajkavian dialect) in Russian in 1905. Kajkavian dialects have been classified along various criteria: for instance Serbian philologist Aleksandar Belić divided (1927) the Kajkavian dialect according to the reflexes of Proto-Slavic phonemes /tj/ and /dj/ into three subdialects: eastern, northwestern and southwestern. However, later investigations did not corroborate Belić's division.
Georgiana Rose Simpson (1865–1944) was a philologist and the first African- American woman to receive a PhD in the United States. Simpson received her doctoral degree in German from the University of Chicago in 1921.
Nicholas Adontz (, Nikoġayos Adonc’, also spelled Adonts; ; January 10, 1871 - January 27, 1942) was an Armenian historian, specialist of Byzantine and Armenian studies, and philologist. Yuzbashyan, Karen. Ադոնց, Նիկողայոս Գևորգի (Adonts, Nikoghayos Gevorki). Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia.
Rasmus Viggo Brøndal (13 October 1887, Copenhagen - 14 December 1942, Copenhagen) was a Danish philologist and professor of Romance languages and literature at Copenhagen University. He was also a founder of the Linguistic Circle of Copenhagen.
Serb clothes in Bačka by Jovan Pačić Jovan Pačić (Baja, 6 November 1771 – Budapest, 4 December 1849) was a Serbian soldier, poet, writer, philologist, translator, illustrator and painter. He was the first Serb to translate Goethe.
Paul Miron (13 June 1926, Giulești, Suceava County - 17 April 2008, Freiburg, Germany) was a Romanian linguist and philologist, professor at the University of Freiburg, the first professor of Romanian Language and Literature in West Germany.
His wife Leelo- Helgi Tamm was a philologist, he had two children - Pille Lausmäe (born 23.04.1958, also an interior architect; mother of the interior architect Ville Lausmäe) and Kalevi Tamm. Väino Tamm is buried in Metsakalmistu.
He was a student and professor at Jena and Halle. In 1809, he became professor at Königsberg. In 1820, he resumed his chair at Halle. Although he taught theology, he is chiefly known as a philologist.
Fitzedward Hall (March 21, 1825 - February 1, 1901) was an American Orientalist, and philologist. He was the first American to edit a Sanskrit text, and was an early collaborator in the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) project.
Enno Friedrich Wichard Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff (22 December 1848 - 25 September 1931) was a German classical philologist. Wilamowitz, as he is known in scholarly circles, was a renowned authority on Ancient Greece and its literature.
WIPO (German court) decision. In "scientologie.org - domain dispute". The English-language term "Scientology" originated neither with Hubbard nor Nordenholz, but with philologist Allen Upward, who coined the term in 1907 in his book The New Word.
Another important figure of the time was Adolfo Veber Tkalčević, a philologist, writer, literary critic and aestheticist. He continued the tradition of the Illyrian movement, at the same time introducing elements of Realism into Croatian literature.
Hans Ferdinand Massmann. Hans Ferdinand Massmann (; 15 August 1797 – 3 August 1874) was a German philologist, known for his studies in Old German language and literature, and for his work introducing gymnastics into schools in Prussia.
Rudolf von Raumer (14 April 1815, Breslau – 30 August 1876, Erlangen) was a German philologist and linguist, known for his extensive research of the German language. He was the son of geologist Karl Georg von Raumer.
Janus Dousa Janus Dousa (Latinized from Jan van der Does), Lord of Noordwyck (6 December 1545 – 8 October 1604), was a Dutch statesman, jurist, historian, poet and philologist, and the first Librarian of Leiden University Library.
Leonard Neidorf (born c. 1988) is an American philologist who is Professor of English at Nanjing University. Neidorf specializes in the study of Old English and Middle English literature, and is a known authority on Beowulf.
Hensleigh Wedgwood (21 January 1803 – 2 June 1891) was a British etymologist, philologist and barrister, author of A Dictionary of English Etymology. He was a cousin of Charles Darwin, whom his sister Emma married in 1839.
An article looking back ten years after his death. Klages influence was widespread and amongst his great admirers were contemporaries like Jewish thinker Walter Benjamin, philosopher Ernst Cassirer, philologist Walter F. Otto and novelist Hermann Hesse.
Lilit Makunts (; born 7 November 1983), is an Armenian philologist and politician, current head of ruling My Step Alliance faction in the National Assembly and former Minister of Culture in the first cabinet of Nikol Pashinyan.
Albert Rehm (August 15, 1871 (in Augsburg)- July 31, 1949 (in Munich)) was a German philologist best known for his work on the Antikythera mechanism - he was the first to propose that it was an astronomical calculator.
In 1839, he began a periodical called Il Filologo (The Philologist), which was of a literary nature. He issued the periodical for three years. Furthermore, he published various booklets of general public interest. Cumbo died in 1877.
Allied Publishers, New Delhi, 2006. (edited) Nietzsche: Philologist, Philosopher and Cultural Critic. Allied Publishers, New Delhi, 2006. (This book is reviewed in Journal of Indian Council of Philosophical Research, vol. 24, 1, 2007, pp. 252-53) (edited).
Paul Faure (; 1 January 1916 in Paris – 13 July 2007) was a distinguished French archaeologist and philologist. He worked extensively on the history and linguistics of the Mediterranean, and especially of Crete and of the Minoan civilization.
Tofig Muhammad oglu Huseynzade (; 20 September 1946 – 13 November 2006) also spelled as Tofiq Huseynzade was a philologist, folklorist, journalist and poet of Azerbaijan. He was a member of the Union of Journalists of the USSR (1987).
The Space Trilogy or Cosmic Trilogy is a series of science fiction novels by C. S. Lewis. A philologist named Elwin Ransom is the hero of the first two novels and an important character in the third.
Bogoslav Šulek (born Bohuslav Šulek; April 20, 1816 – November 30, 1895) was a Croatian philologist, historian and lexicographer. He was very influential in creating Croatian terminology in the areas of social and natural sciences, technology and civilization.
Claude Sallier (4 April 1685, in Saulieu – 6 September 1761, in Paris) was a French ecclesiastic and philologist, as well as professor of Hebrew at the Collège royal and garde des manuscrits of the Bibliothèque du Roi.
Kenneth Roy Norman FBA (born 21 July 1925) is a British philologist. He is Professor Emeritus of Indian Studies at the University of Cambridge, and is a leading authority on Pali and other Middle Indo-Aryan languages.
John Frederick Lindow (born July 23, 1946) is an American philologist who is Professor Emeritus of Old Norse and Folklore at University of California, Berkeley. He is a well known authority on Old Norse religion and literature.
Toril Swan (born 19 October 1945) is a Norwegian philologist. She was born in Sandnessjøen. Following a bachelor's degree at Bates College in 1970 she graduated from the University of Oslo with the cand.philol. degree in 1978.
Alf Torp (1853–1916) Alf Torp (September 27, 1853 – September 26, 1916) was a Norwegian philologist and author. He is most known for his work with Indo- European and Nordic language history and meaning of ancient languages.
Roman Dyboski around 1925 Roman Dyboski (19 November 1883 in Cieszyn - 1 June 1945 in Kraków) was a Polish philologist and literature scholar. Professor at the Jagiellonian University since 1911. Member of the Polish Academy of Learning.
George Oliver Curme, Sr. (January 14, 1860 – April 29, 1948) was an American grammarian and philologist. He is known for writing Grammar of the German Language (1905, revised 1922), and A Grammar of the English Language (1931).
Hadley was born in Fairfield, New York, 19 July 1826. He was the youngest son of Prof. James Hadley, of Buffalo, New York, and the brother of philologist James Hadley. He graduated from Yale College in 1847.
Ivan Vahylevych, Jan Wagilewicz, (born 2 September 1811 in Yasen, today in Rozhniativ Raion, Ivano-Frankivsk region, Ukraine - died 10 May 1866 in Lviv) was Romantic poet, philologist, and ethnographer of the Galician revival in Western Ukraine.
Valery Semenovich Durov (; ) is a Russian antiquarian, philologist, and academic (Honored Worker of Higher Professional Education of the Russian Federation). From 1992-2013, he was head of the Department of Classical Philology at St. Petersburg State University.
With a scholarship from the Canadian government, Puhvel went to study at Harvard University, where he was elected a Member of the Harvard Society of Fellows in 1953. From 1954 to 1955, he studied at Sorbonne University in Paris, France, and at Uppsala University in Uppsala, Sweden. In Paris, his teachers included the linguists Émile Benveniste, Georges Dumézil, Pierre Chantraine and Michel Lejeune, and the philologist Alfred Ernout, while at Uppsala, philologist Stig Wikander was among his teachers. He subsequently lectured on the classics at McGill, Harvard and University of Texas at Austin.
Ludwig Schopen (17 October 1799, in Düsseldorf - 22 November 1867, in Bonn) was a German classical philologist and Byzantinist. As a gymnasium student in his hometown of Düsseldorf, he was encouraged by Karl Wilhelm Kortüm and Friedrich Kohlrausch to study history and philology. He studied at the University of Heidelberg as a pupil of Friedrich Creuzer, and in 1818 transferred to the newly-founded University of Bonn. Subsequently, he became a disciple of philologist Karl Friedrich Heinrich at Bonn, where in 1821 he received the first doctorate awarded by the faculty of philosophy.
Fedor Ivanovich Buslaev (; April 25, 1818 – August 12, 1898) was a Russian Empire philologist, art historian, and folklorist who represented the Mythological school of comparative literature and linguistics. He was profoundly influenced by Jacob Grimm and Theodor Benfey.
Eduard Hercigonja (born 20 August 1929) is a Croatian philologist, Croatist and literary historian. University professor and a member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, he authored several fundamental works on medieval Croatian literature and culture.
Karl Ferdinand Becker Karl Ferdinand Becker (14 April 1775 Lieser (Mosel) – 4 September 1849 Offenbach am Main) was a German physician, educationalist, and philologist. He wrote a German grammar. His deductive approach to comparative philology was later discredited.
Duan Yucai Duan Yucai () (1735–1815), courtesy name Ruoying () was a Chinese philologist of the Qing Dynasty. He made great contributions to the study of Historical Chinese phonology, and is known for his annotated edition of Shuowen Jiezi.
A version of the tale, titled De appels van Damasko (English: "The apples of Damascus"), was sent in 1894 to the collection of Dutch philologist Gerrit Jacob Boekenoogen.De Magische Vlucht. Nederlandse volksverhalen. Samengesteld en ingeleid door Theo Meder.
Josef Dobrovský Dobrovskýs bust on Kampa Island in Prague Josef Dobrovský (17 August 1753 – 6 January 1829) was a Czech philologist and historian, one of the most important figures of the Czech National Revival along with Josef Jungmann.
In 1916, with a thesis on the work of philologist Gábor Döbrentei, Goriupp earned her doctorate at the Franz Joseph University in Kolozsvár, Austria-Hungary.Agnes Kenyon, ed., Goriupp Alisz, Magyar Életrajzi Lexikon, 1000-1990. Retrieved 2010-12-26.
Walter William Skeat Walter William Skeat, FBA (21 November 18356 October 1912) was the pre-eminent British philologist of his time. He was instrumental in developing the English language as a higher education subject in the United Kingdom.
Nicodemus Frischlin Philipp Nicodemus Frischlin (also spelled Nikodemus) (22 September 1547 – 29 November 1590) was a German philologist, poet, playwright, mathematician, and astronomer, born at Erzingen, today part of Balingen in Württemberg, where his father was parish minister.
Ericus Johannis Schroderus (c. 1608 – 1639, Upsaliensis) was a Swedish philologist and historian, living in Uppsala. He compiled the first dictionary which included Finnish as an entry language. Lexicon Latino-Sondicum ("Latin- Scandinavian Dictionary") was published in 1637.
Kurt Baldinger (November 17, 1919 – January 17, 2007) was a Swiss linguist and philologist who made important contributions to Romance studies in the Gallo- Romanic and Ibero-Romanic branches, with works of lexicography, historical linguistics, etymology and semantics.
Dámaso Alonso y Fernández de las Redondas (22 October 1898 – 25 January 1990) was a Spanish poet, philologist and literary critic. Though a member of the Generation of '27, his best-known work dates from the 1940s onwards.
Efim Etkind (, 26 February 1918, Petrograd - 22 November 1999, Potsdam) was a Soviet philologist and translation theorist.Efim Etkind in the Grand Larousse encyclopédique In the 1960s and 1970s he was a dissident; from 1974 he lived in France.
Philippe d'Aquin born Mordekhaï Crescas (often Italianate in Judah Mordecai) (Carpentras, 1578 - Paris, 1650), was a French physician, hebraist, philologist and orientalist, born Jewish, but who converted to Catholic Christianity and was later involved in persecution of Jews.
Felix Jacoby (; 19 March 1876 – 10 November 1959) was a German classicist and philologist. He is best known among classicists for his highly important work Fragmente der griechischen Historiker, a collection of text fragments of ancient Greek historians.
Arthur Hubert Terry (17 February 1927 in York, England - 24 January 2004 in Colchester, Essex) was an English philologist, critic and translator, who was an expert in Catalan literature, and one of the best experts on Joan Maragall.
Ivar Andreas Aasen (; 5 August 1813 – 23 September 1896) was a Norwegian philologist, lexicographer, playwright, and poet. He is best known for having assembled from dialects one of the two official written versions of the Norwegian language, Nynorsk.
Christian was called the "Philologist" because of his extensive knowledge of Greek grammar and his ability to comment upon the Gospels in their original Greek. He also likely had some understanding of Hebrew.Schaff, Philip. History of the Christian Church.
Nohum Shtif (; 1879, Rovno – 1933, Kiev), was a Jewish linguist, literary historian, publisher, translator, and philologist of the Yiddish languageEstraikh, Gennady (2010, October 18). "Shtif, Nokhem." YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. Retrieved 2015-09-18 from www.yivoencyclopedia.org.
Maurizio Bettini (born 24 July 1947) is an Italian philologist, anthropologist and novelist. He is a professor of classical philology at the University of Siena and director of Siena's Centre for the Study of Anthropology and the Ancient World.
Sir Alan Henderson Gardiner (29 March 1879, in Eltham – 19 December 1963, in Oxford) was an English Egyptologist, linguist, philologist, and independent scholar. He is regarded as one of the premier Egyptologists of the early and mid-20th century.
Adalbert Bezzenberger Adalbert Bezzenberger (14 April 1851 – 31 October 1922) was a German philologist. He was born at Kassel and died at Königsberg. He is considered to be the founder of Baltic philology.Bezzenberger, Adalbert In: Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB).
Manuel Seco Reymundo (born 20 September 1928) is a Spanish lexicographer, linguist and philologist. He worked at the department of lexicography of the Real Academia Española between 1962 and 1993. He became a member of the Academia in 1980.
Another correspondent was the fellow polymath Oliver Wendell Holmes: the exchanges with Wendell Holmes would continue for twenty-five years. Bellows also found time to master French: another of his correspondents was the late emperor's philologist nephew, Lucien Bonaparte.
Félix Gaffiot (; 27 September 1870 – 2 November 1937) was a French philologist and teacher. He was the author of the renowned 1934 work Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français (Illustrated Latin–French Dictionary), which is commonly referred to as the Gaffiot.
Failed to reach the South Pole before Roald Amundsen and died on the way back. Became a national hero to the British because of his perseverance. # Enoch Powell, politician, linguist, soldier, philologist and poet. # Sir Cliff Richard, pop singer.
Viktor Isaakovich Fainberg (, born 26 November 1931, Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR) is a philologist, prominent figure of the dissident movement in the Soviet Union, participant of the 1968 Red Square demonstration, and the director of the Campaign Against Psychiatric Abuse.
Cheng Duanli (, 1271–1345) was a Neo-Confucian scholar of the Yuan Dynasty in China, educator, poet, and philologist. He was also known under Zi names Jìngshū (敬叔) and Jìnglǐ 敬禮, and Hao name Wèizhāi (畏齋).
Thomas Hardy (1757-1804) John Horne Tooke (25 June 1736 – 18 March 1812), known as John Horne until 1782 when he added the surname of his friend William Tooke to his own, was an English clergyman, politician, and philologist.
Francisco Codera y Zaidín (Huesca, Spain, June 23, 1836 – November 6, 1917) was a Spanish historian, philologist and Arabist scholar. Among his students, known in the academic field as the Beni Codera, were Arabists Rafael Altamira and José Deleito.
Jérémie Jacques Oberlin. Jérémie-Jacques Oberlin (8 August 1735 – 10 October 1806) was an Alsatian philologist and archaeologist. He was also known as Jeremias Jakob Oberlin in German. The brother of Jean Frédéric Oberlin, he was born at Strasbourg.
Carl Richard Unger (2 July 1817 - 30 November 1897) was a Norwegian historian and philologist. Unger was professor of Germanic and Romance philology at the University of Christiania from 1862 and was a prolific editor of Old Norse texts.
Densusianu, pp. 31–32 Philologist Andreea Giorgiana Marcu notes that, as a translator of Western literature, Beldiman was necessarily a participant in the Age of Enlightenment. He resonated most with Neoclassicism, and especially with its "obviously moralizing" accounts.Marcu, pp.
Rodolphe Kasser 2007 Rodolphe Kasser (14 January 1927 – 8 October 2013),CIRAS (Centre Interdisciplinaire des Recherches archéologiques de la Somme) philologist and archaeologist, was a Coptic scholar and Swiss national. He was an expert in translation of ancient Coptic language manuscripts.
Puhvel married Estonian microbiologist on June 4, 1960, with whom he has three children. He is the brother of philologist Martin Puhvel. He resides in Encino, Los Angeles, but spends every summer at the restored family farm in Kõrvemaa, Estonia.
He was born at Eutin, near Lübeck. He was placed in a gymnasium in Eutin, which was under the direction of ,Morris 1874, p. 289. a philologist influenced by Immanuel Kant. He was educated at the universities of Kiel, Leipzig, Berlin.
Gregorio Mengarini (21 July 181123 September 1886) was an Italian Jesuit priest and missionary and linguist. He worked as a pioneer missionary in the north-west of the United States to the Flathead Nation, and became the philologist of their languages.
Louis Chatelain (23 February 1883 – 6 October 1950) was a 20th-century French historian, archaeologist and university professor. The son of Émile Chatelain, philologist and Latinist, he particularly worked on the excavation sites of Orange, Maktar (Tunisia) and Volubilis (Morocco).
Gertrud Herzog-Hauser (15 June 1894 – 9 October 1953) was an Austrian classical philologist. She was specialised in ancient mythology and religion as well as Latin literature and published Latin school textbooks. She campaigned for equal rights for women in education.
This view was likely based on the ethical ideas of Seneca which were rediscovered and developed into Neostoicism by the Flemish philologist and humanist Justus Lipsius. These new ideas were generally accepted in Antwerp's humanist circle of which Brouwer formed part.
Signature in Bulgarian Gavril Iliev Katsarov () was a Bulgarian historian, classical philologist and archeologist. Rector of Sofia University. Director of the National Archaeological Museum and the Bulgarian Archeological Institute. Роден Гаврил Кацаров (1874 - 1958) Adopted as the father of Bulgarian Thracology.
He was born in Barmen (now Wuppertal), Germany. His poetry, marked by simple feeling, fine diction, and original matter, won great popularity. He died in Barmen. His daughter, Adeline, was a philologist, scholar, and champion for the equality of women.
Ljubov Zinovjevna Sova (Russian: Любовь Зиновьевна Сова) (Aksenova since 1979) is a Russian philologist notable for contributions in the field of linguistics and orientalistics. Her main fields of professional interest include linguistics, African philology, semiotics, typology, Slavic languages and journalism.
The philologist Ernst Curtius provides an account of its history, and many examples, in European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages. Praise and blame were "reduced" to praise by Aristotle, he wrote; and recently another author called it a "blameless genre".
He also published Musikalische Verzierungen. Otto, born from Zwintscher's marriage to Frieda, had three sons: the philologist Arthur (1867–1937), the painter Oskar (1870–1916) and the pianist Rudolf (1871–1946). Zwintscher died in near Radebeul at the age of 64.
The grave of Rev John Jamieson, St Cuthberts Churchyard, Edinburgh Rev John Jamieson (5 March 1759 – 12 July 1838) was a Scottish minister of religion, lexicographer, philologist and antiquary. His most important work is the Dictionary of the Scottish Language.
Hugo Suolahti. Viktor Hugo Suolahti (7 October 1874 in Hämeenlinna – 23 February 1944 in Helsinki) was a Finnish politician, linguist and philologist. Before 1906, he was known as Viktor Hugo Palander. Philosopher Pentti Linkola was the son of Hugo Suolahti's daughter.
Rudolf Hercher Rudolf Hercher (; 11 January 182126 March 1878) was a German classical philologist, who worked as a Grammar school teacher in Rudolstadt (1847–1859) and Berlin (1861–1878). He is especially known for his textual criticism of diverse Greek authors.
Knut Robberstad, c. 1933 Knut Ingebrikt Robberstad (22 April 1899 - 31 July 1981) was a Norwegian jurist and philologist. He was born in Askøy, Hordaland, Norway. He was a professor of jurisprudence at the University of Oslo from 1945 to 1969.
Marie Jalowicz (b. 4 April 1922, d. 16 September 1998) was a German philologist and historian of philosophy. She became known to larger audiences for her autobiographical account of the persecution of jews in Nazi Germany, which was published posthumously.
Antoine Cabaton (11 December 1863 – 25 November 1942) was a French philologist, one of the founders of the insulindian studies. Besides his teaching duties, his researches and publications were devoted not only to language but also religion, history and contemporary issues.
Francisco Sánchez de las Brozas; engraving by Rafael Esteve; from Portraits of Illustrious Spaniards (1791) Francisco Sánchez de las Brozas (1523-1600), also known as El Brocense, and in Latin as Franciscus Sanctius Brocensis, was a Spanish philologist and humanist.
Yuri Otkupshchikov (; 29 August 1924, Kazan – 25 September 2010, St. Petersburg; also spelled Otkupscikov, Otkupsikov, Otkupschikov, Otkupschtschikov) was a Soviet and Russian philologist and linguist. For more than 50 years, he taught at the St. Petersburg State University Faculty of Philology.
Wilmer Cave Wright Wilmer Cave Wright (January 21, 1868 – November 16, 1951) was a British-born American classical philologist, and a contributor to the culture and history of medicine. She was a professor at Bryn Mawr College, where she taught Greek.
They document the sale of a vineyard and other land, and include the names of Pātaspak, son of Tīrēn and Awīl, son of Baænīn. They were translated by philologist Ellis H. Minns and published in the Journal of Hellenic Studies.
Ingeborg Hammer-Jensen (Copenhagen, 20 January 1880 - Copenhagen, 6 April 1955) was a historian of science and classical philologist from Denmark. She was the third woman to be awarded a PhD in Denamrk and was an expert on Greek scientific writing.
Kazimierz Andrzej Jaworski (28 November 1897 – 6 September 1973) was a Polish philologist, teacher, poet, translator and publisher. He used pseudonym KAJ. He was born in Siedliszcze.Nasz patron Kazimierz Andrzej Jaworski His parents were Edward Jaworski and Maria Jaworska née Smoleńska.
Letter from Kyiv Central Historical Archives signed by Director L.Y. Demchenko and head of Information Department E.V. Polozova. Letter No. 02-1132, dated November 4, 2008 addressed to Azerbaijan philologist Badulla Ajaloghlu in Baku. Photo p. 159 in Azerbaijan International, Vol.
As a professional philologist, Gerasimova published scholarly articles on history of the Russian avant-garde literature, including the legacy of the OBERIU members Alexander Vvedensky, Daniil Kharms and Konstantin Vaginov. She has edited several publications of their previously unpublished works.
Richard Foerster's academic career spanned from the 1860s to the Interwar period. Educated a philologist and humanist, Foerster early turned to archaeology and later to art history; but he never quit pursuing his philological tasks which were his life's work.
Else Olaug Mundal (born 8 November 1944) is a Norwegian philologist. She was born in Vanylven and graduated with the cand.philol. degree in 1971. She was appointed as a docent in Norse philology at the University of Oslo in 1977.
Rudolf Kassel (11 May 1926 – 26 February 2020) was a German classical philologist. He was a professor at the Free University of Berlin from 1963 to 1975 and subsequently the University of Cologne from 1975 until his retirement in 1991.
Dr. David Galeano Olivera in 2016. David Abdón Galeano Olivera (born February 18, 1961 in Asunción) is a Paraguayan linguist, anthropologist, philologist, translator, and educator. He is also the president and founder of the Lyceum of Guarani Language and Culture.
Dolors Lamarca Dolors Lamarca y Morell (Granollers, Vallès Oriental, 19 October 1943) is a Catalan librarian and philologist. She has led the Service of Libraries and Bibliographic Heritage of the Generalitat de Catalunya, and has directed the National Library of Catalonia.
Anna Elbina Morpurgo Davies, (21 June 1937 – 27 September 2014) was an Italian philologist who specialised in comparative Indo-European linguistics. She spent her career at Oxford University, where she was the Professor of Comparative Philology and Fellow of Somerville College.
Oscar Peer (23 April 1928 – 22 December 2013) was a Swiss novelist, playwright and philologist. His works were written in Romansch and German, and comprised epic novels, short stories, and drama. He was also well known for his Ladin- German dictionary.
Picture of Rudolf Tombo Jr. printed in The New York Times on December 21, 1913 Rudolf Tombo Jr. (October 24, 1875 – May 21, 1914) was a German-born American philologist who was associate professor of Germanic languages at Columbia University.
Elguja Khintibidze (born June 7, 1937) is a Georgian Philologist, Doctor of Philological Sciences; Professor at Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University; Academician of The Georgian National Academy of Sciences; Member of Société Internationale pour l’Étude de la Philosophie Médiévale – S.I.E.P.M.
James Wilson Bright (1852–1926) was an American philologist active in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. He was a Professor of English Philology at Johns Hopkins University, and specialized in early Germanic languages and Old and Middle English specifically.
Johann Kolross (also Johannes Kolrose, Latinized Rhodonthracius, c. 1487 - c. 1560) was a poet, philologist and educator of the German Renaissance and the Protestant Reformation. He studied in Freiburg, and worked as rector of the boys' school in Basel from 1529.
Estiphan Panoussi (born September 11,1935 in Sanandaj, Iran) is a philologist, philosopher, orientalist, and international scholar of Iranian Assyrian (Aramaic) origin. He is professor emeritus of the University of Gothenburg and native speaker of Senaya, a Northeastern Neo-Aramaic language.
Iacob, pp. 299–300 According to philologist Gheorghe Bogdan-Duică, Alecu Beldiman's next translation was from Homer's Odyssey (as Odiseia lui Omir). Andreas Wolf, a Transylvanian Saxon physician, met the Beldimans ca. 1797, praising them as lovers of arts and literature.
Antonio Garzya (born 22 January 1927 in Brindisi, died 6 March 2012 in Telese Terme) was an Italian emeritus professor of Greek literature at the University of Naples Federico II, classical scholar, philologist, and specialist in ancient Greek and Byzantine studies.
Magia del credito, 1824 Francesco Fuoco (Mignano, 1774 – Naples, 1841), was an Italian philologist, economist and religious. Some of his works were published under the name of Giuseppe De Welz, a banker from Como, who hired Fuoco as a ghost writer.
In 1897, he married Isabella Alver Vibe (1870–1937). He received the King's Medal of Merit (Kongens fortjenstmedalje) in gold in 1912. He was the father of philologist and literary historian Gunnar Høst and stepfather of writer Inger Alver Gløersen.
Wolfgang Schadewaldt (15 March 1900 in Berlin – 10 November 1974 in Tübingen) was a German classical philologist working mostly in the field of Greek philology and a translator. He also was a professor of University of Tübingen and University of Freiburg.
Amat in 2014 Jordi Amat Fusté (born 1978, Barcelona) is a Spanish essayist, philologist, editor and cultural critic, expert in the 20th-century intellectual history of Catalonia and the rest of Spain. He writes in both the Catalan and Spanish languages.
Sophie Katsarava (, Sofio Katsarava, born 8 December 1976), is a Georgian politician, diplomat and philologist. She was appointed Georgian Ambassador to the United Kingdom in 2020. Between 2016 and 2019 she was a Georgian Dream Member of the Parliament of Georgia.
Huang Kan (Chinese: 黃侃; 1886 – 8 October 1935), courtesy name Jigang (季剛), born into a family of Hubei ancestry in Chengdu, Sichuan province, was a Chinese phonologist, philologist and revolutionary. As a teen, he tested into Wuchang School, a prestigious secondary school, but then was expelled for spreading anti-Qing sentiments. He then went to study in Japan and became a student of the most important Chinese scholar and philologist Zhang Taiyan. Huang was regarded as the most important phonologist since the high Qing (1644 - 1912) and gained recognition at first through his literary criticism of the sixth century.
He was born on 22 June 1979 in Bijelo Polje, today a part of Montenegro, to Bosniak parents.. He finished middle school in his hometown, and graduated from the Madrasa "Gazi Isa-beg"Rein Novi Pazar. He graduated from several faculties where he acquired the following titles: graduate Islamic theologian, graduate Islamic pedagogue, master of Islamic pedagogy, graduate philologist Serb / Bosnian, master philologist Serb / Bosnian. He is currently a doctoral student at the Faculty of Philology, University of Belgrade in the module for literature. He was an imam in mosques in Bijelo Polje, Bar and Novi Pazar.
His pupils included Ibrāhīm al-Ḥarbī, Ibn al- Sikkīt, and Ibn al-Azhar. As a leading philologist, Ibn al- A‘rābī was critical of rival scholars of rare linguistic expressions (al-kalām al- gharīb), and in particular of Abū Ubaydah and al-Aṣma’ī.
Renward Brandstetter (29 June 1860 – 17 April 1942) was a Swiss philologist and linguist who published about medieval and modern Swiss dialects language and the older Swiss theatre history and studied the insular Malayo-Polynesian languages (now considered a subgroup of Austronesian languages).
John Meier (14 June 1864 – 3 May 1953) was a German folklorist and philologist. He founded both the (Deutsches Volksliedarchiv, DVA) and also the Swiss Volksliedarchiv. Meier was born in Vahr, part of Bremen, and died in Freiburg at the age of 88.
Renata Johanna von Scheliha (born 16 August 1901 in Zessel, Oels, Silesia, German Empire; died 4 November 1967 in New York, USA) was a German classical philologist. Alt URL She authored a number of books, treatises and monographs and carried out several translations.
Annie Eliot Trumbull was born on March 2, 1857, in Hartford, Connecticut, to Sarah A. (Robinson) and James Hammond Trumbull,"James Hammond Trumbull." Dictionary of American Biography. Charles Scribner's Sons. 1936. . a noted philologist, historian, state librarian, and Connecticut Secretary of State.
Brian Oliver Murdoch (born 26 June 1944) is a British philologist who is Emeritus Professor of German at the University of Stirling. He specializes in the study of early Germanic and Celtic literature, on which he has authored and edited several influential works.
Tamri Pkhakadze was born in Tbilisi, Georgia. She graduated from Tbilisi State University in 1979 as a philologist. She has a PhD in philology. 1980-2006 she worked in the Old Georgian Literature department at the Shota Rustaveli Institute of Georgian Literature.
Jacques De Crucque (also known as Jacob Cruucke or by his Latinized name Jacobus Cruquius; died June 22, 1584) was a Flemish humanist, philologist, and scholar of the 16th century. He was born in the city of Mesen some time before 1520.
Charles Alexandre (17 February 1797, Amiens – 6 June 1870, Paris) was a 19th- century French hellenist, philologist, general inspector of the Instruction publique and a member of the Institut de France. He was a student at the École normale supérieure in 1814.
Her first husband was the philologist, author, lecturer and lawyer, Adley Cummins (d. 1889); they had one child, a daughter, Genevieve (1875–1905). Her second husband was the lawyer, newspaper artist, novelist and playwright Philip Verrill Mighels (d. 1911); they divorced 1910.
The whole incident has been critically analyzed again by philologist E. Peruzzi, who by comparing the different versions, strives to demonstrate the overall authenticity of the books.E. Peruzzi Origini di Roma II. Le lettere Bologna 1973 pp. 107 ff. as cited by Sini.
Aleksei Fedorovich Losev (; 23 September 1893 – 24 May 1988) was a Russian philosopher, philologist and culturologist, one of the most prominent figures in Russian philosophical and religious thought of the 20th century. Special Issue: Sophia Across Culture: From Old Testament to Postmodernity.
Ilsetraut Hadot is a classical philologist and a specialist about Ancient Philosophy. She has written about Seneca, the history of education in Antiquity. and Neoplatonism. She has edited, commentated and translated the commentary of Simplicius, a Neoplatonist philosopher, about the Enchiridion of Epictetus.
The statue of Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo is a monument in Madrid, Spain. A work by Lorenzo Coullaut Valera, it consists of a limestone statue of the aforementioned philologist and it is installed in the lobby of the National Library of Spain.
Eduard Munk (14 January 1803 - 3 May 1871) was a German philologist. He was a cousin of Salomon Munk. Munk was born in Gross Glogau. He studied from 1822 to 1825 at Breslau and Berlin, and was a favorite disciple of August Böckh.
Renos Apostolidis (; 2 March 1924 – 10 March 2004) was a Greek writer, philologist and literary critic. His father was Heracles N. Apostolidis, a notable journalist and director of the National Library between 1945 and 1959. His mother Elpiniki (née Zambeli) was a teacher.
Johannes Hoops (born 20 July 1865 - 14 April 1949) was a German philologist who was Professor of English philology at the University of Heidelberg. He is best known as the publisher of the first edition of the Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde (1911-1919).
Stjepan Damjanović Stjepan Damjanović (born 2 November 1946) is a Croatian linguist, philologist and paleoslavist. He worked as a regular professor at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Zagreb. He is a former President of Matica hrvatska.
Antenor de Veras Nascentes (1886–1972) was a Brazilian philologist, etymologist, and lexicographer. He wrote the first etymological dictionary of Brazil. He also had an interest in dialect and experimental phonetics. He did analysis of popular speech in Rio de Janeiro in 1922.
The Danish philologist Johannes Brøndum-Nielsen divided the history of Danish into a period from 800 AD to 1525 to be "Old Danish", which he subdivided into "Runic Danish" (800-1100), Early Middle Danish (1100–1350) and Late Middle Danish (1350–1525).
According to philologist Rudolf Simek, while Saga of Erik the Red may be an embellished literary narrative, details regarding the seeress, such as the high seat, staff, and the circle appear to derive from historical practices in Germanic paganism. Simek (2007: 326).
Vincas Mickevičius (October 19, 1882 – July 17, 1954), better known by his pen name Vincas Krėvė-Mickevičius, was a Lithuanian writer, poet, novelist, playwright and philologist. He is also known as Vincas Krėvė, the shortened name he used in the United States.
Magnus Ulleland (10 September 1929 - 7 March 2016) was a Norwegian philologist. Ulleland was born in Flora. He was appointed professor at the University of Oslo from 1974 to 1976. He was a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.
Fyodor Dmitrievich Batyushkov (Фёдор Дмитриевич Батюшков, September 7 [o.s. August 26], 1857, Kosma village, Tver Governorate, Russian Empire, - March 19, 1920, Petrograd, Soviet Russia) was a Russian philologist, editor (Kosmopolis, 1897-1898; Mir Bozhy, 1902-1906), literary critic, theatre and literary historian.
Sylfest Lomheim. Sylfest Lomheim (born 11 March 1945 in Hafslo) is a Norwegian philologist. He was the director of the Norwegian Language Council from 2003 to 2010. He is also associate professor (amanuensis) in the Norwegian language at the University of Agder.
He worked as a Germanic philologist and professor of Romanesque philology from 1898 to 1908 as Professor of Romanesque Philology in 1908-1913. He applied for the professorship of aesthetics and modern literature in 1910, but was beaten to it by Yrjö Hirn.
Konstantin Bogdanov Konstantin Anatolevich Bogdanov () is a Russian anthropologist and philologist whose areas of investigation covers Russian culture, including folklore, rhetoric, and the history of science and humanities. He has also researched the history of social thought in 18-20th Century Russia.
Kanseyt Abdezuly () is a Kazakhstani philologist. He is a Dean and Professor of the Philology faculty in Al-Farabi Kazakh National University.Al-Farabi Kazakh National University He is a member of the Writers' Union of Kazakhstan, a body of the country's elite writers.
Gustav Indrebø (17 December 1889 in Samnanger, Hordaland - 3 August 1942) was a Norwegian philologist. His father was a teacher in Årdal, Jølster. His brother Ragnvald Indrebø became bishop of the diocese of Bjørgvin. He graduated in 1917, took a doctorate (dr.
She was survived by Ovid Jr. After the official establishment of Communist Romania, he focused on his work as a philologist, but was still arrested in 1958, and spent six years as a political prisoner. He died in Bucharest, on April 19, 1985.
Eugenics Record Office, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. Pp. 118. The Nazi philologist Josef Nadler declared the East Baltic race to be the main source of German Romanticism.Josef Nadler, Rassenkunde, Volkskunde, Stammeskunde. Dichtung und Volkstum 35 (1934)Josef Nadler, Die Berliner Romantik 1810-1814.
Nora Kershaw Chadwick CBE FSA FBA (28 January 1891 – 24 April 1972)CHADWICK, Nora Kershaw, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 was an English philologist who specialized in Anglo- Saxon, Celtic and Old Norse studies.
Thomas Oswald Cockayne (1807–1873) was a churchman and philologist, best known today for his monumental edition of Old English medical texts.Anne Van Arsdall, Medieval Herbal Remedies: The Old English Herbarium and Anglo-Saxon Medicine (New York: Routledge 2002), pp. 1-34.
Henry Nicol (1845–1880) was a philologist specialized in French phonology. Cousin of Henry Sweet, Nicol was persuaded in 1871 by Frederick James Furnivall to take over the editorship of OED but was prevented by ill health and other problems to do so.
Erich Gülzow (29 March 1888 – 16 August 1954) was a German local historian, philologist and publisher. He wrote books on the history of Vorpommern and the Rügen island. Through his publications on Ernst Moritz Arndt he became known beyond the borders of Pomerania.
Nigar Hasan-Zadeh, (, ) is a poet, philologist of Russian language and literature. She is a member of the Union of Azerbaijani Writers and a member of Pen International Director of "Söz" literary project run by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Azerbaijan.
Irina Isayevna Nakhova (; born 1955 in Moscow) is a Russian artist. Her father, Isai Nakhov, is a philologist. At 14 years old her mother took her to Victor Pivovarov's Atelier. Pivovarov played an important role in her life and later became her mentor.
739 was an American philologist and writer on music, born in Elberfeld, Germany. He emigrated to the United States when he was very young. He graduated from the College of the City of New York in 1890 and from Columbia (A.M., 1905).
Ernst Robert Curtius (; April 14, 1886 - April 19, 1956) was a German literary scholar, philologist, and Romance language literary critic, best known for his 1948 study Europäische Literatur und Lateinisches Mittelalter, translated in English as European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages.
Duncan McMillan (1914 – 1 June 1993) was a British linguist and philologist. He was John Orr Professor of French Language and Romance Linguistics at the University of Edinburgh and a founder of Société Internationale Rencesvals. McMillan was a winner of Rothschild Prize.
He is married to the journalist and TV host Alenka Zor Simoniti. He is the brother of the diplomat Iztok Simoniti and cousin of the philologist and translator Primož Simoniti. Besides Slovene, he is fluent in English, German, French, Italian and Serbo-Croatian.
Emil Osann Emil Osann (May 25, 1787 – January 11, 1842) was a German physician and physiologist from Weimar. He was a founder of scientific balneology. He was the brother of philologist Friedrich Gotthilf Osann (1794-1858) and chemist Gottfried Osann (1796-1866).Goethes Gespräche.
Cahul is home to the State University of Cahul, opened in 1999 and named after Romanian writer and philologist Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu. The university is made up of 3 faculties (Philology – History, Law – Public Administration and Business – Computer Science – Mathematics) with around 2,150 students.
Luka Milovanov Georgijević (Osat, Bosnia-Hercegovina, now Republika Srpska, 1784 - Osat, Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1828) was a Serbian writer and philologist. In literature, he is considered the first children's poet of modern Serbian literature. He advised Vuk Karadžić on the production of grammars and the dictionary.
Kazembek or Kazem-bek — was a Russian noble family of Azerbaijani and Iranian origin. Family was founded by Muhammad Nazir Khan, paymaster general of the Derbent Khanate. Famous members include philologist and historian Alexander Kasimovich Kazembek and his great-grandson, Mladorossi founder Alexander Lvovich Kazembek.
Stefan Karol Jakobielski (born August 11, 1937 in Warsaw) is a Polish historian, archaeologist, philologist, epigraphist. One of the pioneers of nubiology. He participated in archaeological research in Faras, Tell Atrib, Palmyra, Deir el-Bahari and Qasr Ibrim; directed the archaeological works at Old Dongola.
Mit einer einleitenden Darstellung der Bedeutung und Entwicklung der attischen Sage bis auf Euripides. Berlin: Mayer und Müller, 1897. (Diss. Univ. Zürich, 1897.) His doctoral advisor was the classical archaeologist and philologist Hugo Blümner. 1909 Ermatinger became a professor for Germanic philology at ETH Zurich.
The seventh volume remained unpublished. After the death of philologist Pieter Burman the Younger in 1778, Wernsdorf succeeded him as the editor of the Latin Anthology. He had a daughter Louise, married to the German theologian Karl Ludwig Nitzsch, and a son Christian Gottlieb Wernsdorf.
Hans Herter (8 June 1899 – 7 November 1984) was a German Classical philologist who was for many years Director of the Rheinischen Museum für Philologie, Bonn. His main interests lay in the works of Thucydides and Plato. Among his prominent students is Heinz-Günther Nesselrath.
Ubbo Emmius died on the 9 December 1625 in Groningen; his grave stone reads: > For the immortal memory of the famous and faithful old man Ubbo Emmius, a > Frisian from Greetsiel, first rector of the academy, theologist of the pure > doctrine, excellent philologist, perfect historian.
Ernst Leonard Lindelöf (7 March 1870 - 4 June 1946) was a Finnish mathematician, who made contributions in real analysis, complex analysis and topology. Lindelöf spaces are named after him. He was the son of Lorenz Leonard Lindelöf and brother of the philologist Uno Lorenz Lindelöf.
Hasan Ali Khan Garadaghi () or Hasanali khan Karadakhski (), was an Azerbaijani philologist, writer, poet and teacher. He is mainly known for his contribution to "Vatan dili" (Mother Language) which was the main textbook for Azerbaijani school children for almost 40 years, from 1882 to 1920.
Bruno Migliorini Bruno Migliorini (; 19 November 1896 – 18 June 1975) was an Italian linguist and philologist. He was the author of one of the first scientific histories of Italian languageStoria della lingua italiana, Florence, Sansoni, 1960. and was president of the Accademia della Crusca.
Adolfo Veber Tkalčević Adolfo Veber Tkalčević (11 May 1825 − 6 August 1889) was a Croatian philologist, writer, literary critic, aestheticist and politician. Veber is regarded as one of the most prominent Croatian intellectuals of the 19th century and as the founder of Croatian literary criticism.
Richard Henry Geoghegan (; 8 January 1866 - 27 October 1943) was an Anglo- American philologist and the first known Esperantist from the English-speaking world. As a young man, he emigrated to the United States, first living in Washington state and then in the Alaska Territory.
The academy currently has 36 members, as well as a variable number of correspondent members in various Chilean regions and abroad. It has several honorary members, including the Chilean poet Gabriela Mistral, the Spanish philologist Víctor García de la Concha, and Pope John Paul II.
Finn Hødnebø (December 29, 1919 – December 31, 2007) was a Norwegian philologist and a lexicographer. He was most associated with his translations from Old Norse and Medieval Norwegian texts. Finn Hødnebø was born in Søndeled, in Aust-Agder county, Norway. He graduated with the cand.philol.
Margarita Borisovna Rudenko (in Russian: Маргарита Борисовна Руденко; 9 May 1926 in Tiflis - 27 July 1976 in Leningrad) was a Russian philologist, Orientalist, Kurdologist (specialist for Kurdish language, culture and history), literature researcher and ethnographist. She received her Doctor of Sciences degree in 1954.
His juridical publications include Oreigningsvederlaget (1968) and Rettsutferd (1969). A philologist who chaired Noregs Mållag from 1952 to 1957, he translated several documents from Old Norse, including Magnus Lagabøters bylov (1923), a law dating from the reign of Magnus IV of Norway, and Gulatingslovi (1937).
Alojzije Jembrih in 2019. Alojzije Jembrih (born June 11, 1947, Varaždin) is a Croatian literary historian, linguist, philologist, slavist and expert of the Kajkavian literature. He graduated at the classical high school in Zagreb. In Vienna he studied Slavic studies, art history and philosophy.
Ndre Mjeda (20 November 18661 August 1937) was an Albanian philologist, poet, priest, rilindas, translator, writer in the Albanian Renaissance. He was a member of the Mjeda family. He was influenced by the Jesuit writer Anton Xanoni and the Franciscan poet Leonardo De Martino.
Knut Kleve (24 February 1926 – 11 February 2017) was a Norwegian classical philologist and a professor at the University of Bergen and at the University of Oslo. He was particularly known for his efforts on restoration of papyrus fragments from the ancient Roman town Herculaneum.
Skutsch was born on 6 December 1906 in Breslau, then in the German Empire. He was the third child of Franz Skutsch, a German classical philologist. He was six years old when his father died. He was educated at the Friedrichs-Gymnasium in Breslau.
Torleiv Hannaas. Torleiv Hannaas (14 July 1874 - 19 November 1929) was a Norwegian philologist. He was born in Hornnes as a son of farmers Thomas Nilsson Hannaas (1843–1915) and Anne Tolleivsdotter Vetrhus (1845–1944). In July 1906 he married teacher Ingerd Yttreland (1879–1954).
Randvere is a village in Saaremaa Parish, Saare County in western Estonia. Before the administrative reform in 2017, the village was in Laimjala Parish. It is most notable for being the birthplace of philologist Johannes Aavik (1880–1973), a significant modernizator of Estonian language.
Jens Juel. Peter Andreas Heiberg (16 November 1758 – 30 April 1841) was a Danish author and philologist. He was born in Vordingborg, Denmark. The Heiberg ancestry can be traced back to Norway, and has produced a long line of priests, headmasters and other learned men.
Johann Ludwig Brassicanus (1509 – 3 June 1549) was an advisor to the Habsburg monarchy. He was born in Tübingen and was the younger brother of Johann Alexander Brassicanus. He joined his brother in Vienna in 1524. He won distinction both as a philologist and jurist.
Azra Erhat (4 June 1915 – 6 September 1982) was a Turkish author, archaeologist, academician, classical philologist, and translator. A pioneer of Turkish Humanism, Azra Erhat is especially well known for her published works, including many translations into Turkish from the classical literature of Ancient Greece.
Aina Moll Marquès, 2013 Aina Moll Marquès (December 1, 1930 - February 9, 2019) was a Spanish philologist and politician, who served as director of Linguistic Policy of the Generalitat de Catalunya. She was a recipient of Creu de Sant Jordi and the Ramon Llull Award.
On 9 May 1636 Johann Balthasar Schupp married Anna Elisabeth Helwig. As the only (recorded) daughter of the polymath-philologist Christoph Helvig, she came from another academic family in the region. Her father had died in 1617, however. The marriage was a happy one.
John Duncan Ernst Spaeth (September 27, 1868 − July 26, 1954) was an American philologist. A professor of English at Princeton University and later President of the University of Kansas, Spaeth was considered one of the foremost authorities on William Shakespeare in the United States.
The first (crude) edition dates from 1823, but a monumental critical edition, still a standard work, was published by the German-born Romance philologist Carolina Michaëlis de Vasconcellos in 1904. An important paleographic transcription was published by American scholar Henry H. Carter in 1941.
Philippe-Ernest Legrand (2 September 1866. – 1 July 1953. Read « Philippe- Ernest », not Philippe-Emmanuel.) was a French Hellenist. An historian, philologist, archaeologist, epigrapher, his great work was the translation and editing of Histories (Herodotus), published in the Collection Budé, which is still a reference.
At University, he began to study law, but soon turned his attention to Classics at Berlin University under the great philologist Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff. After two years, he moved from Berlin to Göttingen where he stayed until 1912, studying under Friedrich Leo (1851–1914).
Dunlop 1960, p. 921. In the early 8th century, a member of the Bahila, Qutayba ibn Muslim, was appointed the Umayyad governor of Khurasan and was a key general in the Muslim conquest of Transoxiana. The tribe also produced al-Asma'i, the well-known philologist.
Jean Haust (1868–1946) Jean Haust (Verviers, 10 February 1868– Liège, 23 November 1946) was a Belgian academic, linguist and philologist. He was a professor at the University of Liège en became known for his publication of several dictionaries containing the dialect of Liège.
Among European linguists, he was considered a valued scientist and thinker. Particularly important is his correspondence with the Bohemian philologist Josef Dobrovský, his spiritual father, and later with the Serbian philologist Vuk Karadžić. In 1808, he wrote in German and published the first scientific Slovene grammar, titled Grammatik der Slavischen Sprache in Krain, Kärnten und Steyermark (Grammar of the Slavic language in Carniola, Carinthia, and Styria). In his work Glagolita Clozianus (1836), he published the first critically revised, translated, and annotated version of the Freising Manuscripts, the oldest known work in Slovene and the first work in any Slavic language written in the Latin alphabet.
Lucius Caecilicus Minutianus Appuleius was a writer of ancient Rome whose surviving works are about grammar. He was commonly acknowledged until the 19th century to be the author of a work de Orthographia, of which considerable fragments were first published by Italian Cardinal and philologist Angelo Mai.Angelo Mai, Juris Civilis Ante-Justinianei Reliquiae, &c;, Rome, 1823 They were republished by Friedrich Gotthilf Osann, with two other grammatical works, de Nota Aspirationis and de Diphthongis, which also bear the name of Appuleius.Friedrich Gotthilf Osann, Darmstadt, 1826 Danish philologist Johan Nicolai Madvig showed that the treatise de Orthographia was actually the work of a literary impostor of the fifteenth century.
Eldad ben Maḥli ha-Dani (, 'Eldad son of Mahli the Danite') () was a ninth- century Jewish merchant, traveller, and philologist. Though probably originally from southern Arabia, he professed to be a citizen of an "independent Jewish state" in East Africa, inhabited by people claiming descent from the lost Tribes of Dan, Asher, Gad, and Naphtali. Eldad visited Babylonia, Kairouan, and Iberia, where he spread fanciful accounts of the Ten Lost Tribes and halakhot which he claimed he had brought from his native country. Eldad's Hebrew narrative, Sefer Eldad, established his reputation as a philologist whom leading medieval Jewish grammarians and lexicographers quoted as an authority on linguistic difficulties.
Konrad Duden. Statue of Konrad Duden. Konrad Alexander Friedrich Duden (3 January 1829 – 1 August 1911) was a Gymnasium (high school) teacher who became a philologist. He founded the well-known German language dictionary bearing his name Duden, somewhat like Noah Webster in the United States.
Alexei Alexandrovich Shakhmatov (, - 16 August 1920) was a Russian philologist and historian credited with laying foundations for the science of textology. Shakhmatov held the title of Doctor of Russian language and philology (since 1894).Aristov, V. Aleksei Aleksandrovich Shakhmatov (ШАХМАТОВ ОЛЕКСІЙ ОЛЕКСАНДРОВИЧ). Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine.
In the last two, the impetus of his genius led him on a wrong track. He is the first philologist to prove Albanian as a separate branch of Indo-European. Bopp was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1855.
Johannes Nicolai Georg Forchhammer (20 March 1827 – 9 July 1909) was a Danish philologist. He was born in Copenhagen as a son of Johan Georg Forchhammer. He was a nephew of August Friedrich Wilhelm Forchhammer. He finished his secondary education in 1843, and completed the cand.philol.
Just Knud Qvigstad (4 April 1853 – 15 March 1957) was a Norwegian philologist, linguist, ethnographer, historian and cultural historian. He was also a headmaster in Tromsø, and a politician for the Conservative Party who served as mayor of Tromsø and as Minister of Education and Church Affairs.
Elmar Seebold (born September 28, 1934) is a German philologist who specializes in Germanic philology. From 1971 to 1983, Seebold was Professor of Germanic philology at the University of Fribourg. He then transferred to the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. Seebold retired from the University in 1999.
Qvigstadfjellet is a mountain in Nordenskiöld Land at Spitsbergen, Svalbard. It is named after Norwegian philologist and politician Just Knud Qvigstad. The mountain reaches a height of 770 m.a.s.l. It is located between the valley of Orustdalen and the glacier of Vestre Grønfjordbreen, south of Aldegondabreen.
Jean-Pierre Mahé (21 March 1944, Paris) is a French orientalist, philologist and historian of Caucasus, specialist of Armenian studies. Kh. Karadelyan, « Մահե, Ժան-Պիեր Հանրի Մարի » (« Mahé, Jean-Pierre Henri Marie »), in Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia, vol. VII, Armenian National Academy of Sciences, Erevan, 1981, p.185.
Some writers use the writing task to develop their own skill (in writing itself or in another area of knowledge) or explore an idea while they are producing a piece of writing. Philologist J. R. R. Tolkien, for example, created a new language for his fantasy books.
Charles du Fresne Monument of Dufresne Du Cange at the René Goblet Square, Amiens Charles du Fresne, sieur du Cange or Du Cange (; December 18, 1610 in Amiens – October 23, 1688 in Paris, aged 77) was a distinguished philologist and historian of the Middle Ages and Byzantium.
Paradoxical in many of his views on things in general, he was sound and cautious as a philologist; while learned and laborious, he possessed much of the instinctive divination of genius. His grandfather, also named Samuel Birch, was a renowned dramatist and Lord Mayor of London (1814).
Jacob Grimm is a sculpture of German philologist Jacob Grimm by sculptor Elisabet Ney. Completed in 1858, the piece is a portrait bust rendered in marble. The bust was modeled and carved in Berlin, but it is now held by the Elisabet Ney Museum in Austin, Texas.
Georgios Hatzidakis (1915) Georgios Nicolaou Hatzidakis (; , in Myrthios, Ottoman Crete - 28 June 1941, in Athens) was a Greek philologist, who is regarded as the father of linguistics in Greece. He was the first chair of Linguistics and Indian Philology at the University of Athens in 1890–1923.
Jan Arnošt Smoler Jan Arnošt Smoler (; born 3 March 1816, Merzdorf, Boxberg, Saxony - died 13 June 1884, Bautzen) was a Sorbian philologist and writer. He played a vital role in revitalizing the Sorbian languages in the 19th century. He also supported a form of Pan-Slavism.
Edmond Bordeaux Szekely (March 5, 1905 – 1979) was a Hungarian philologist/linguist, philosopher, psychologist and natural living enthusiast. Szekely authored The Essene Gospel of Peace, which he translated from an ancient text he supposedly discovered in the 1920s. Scholars consider the text a forgery.Beskow, Per. (1983).
Wang Yinzhi (; 1766–1834) a Qing dynasty philologist. The son of Wang Niansun, he was the author of the Jingzhuan Shici.Wang Zhangtao 王章涛 (2006). Wang Niansun, Wang Yinzhi nianpu (王念孙, 王引之年谱 "Chronology of Wang Niansun and Wang Yinzhi").
Wolfgang Krause (18 September 1895, Steglitz - 14 August 1970, Göttingen) was a German philologist and linguist. A professor at the University of Göttingen for many years, Krause specialized in comparative linguistics, and was an authority on Celtic studies, Tocharian languages, Germanic studies, Old Norse and particularly runology.
Arturo Agüero Chaves (March 28, 1907 – May 11, 2001), was a Costa Rican writer, poet, philologist, lexicographer and educator. Along with Aquileo J. Echeverría, he is one of the greatest exponents of Costa Rican costumbrismo. He is also considered the father of modern linguistics in Costa Rica.
Eduard Sievers. Eduard Sievers (; 25 November 1850, Lippoldsberg – 30 March 1932, Leipzig) was a philologist of the classical and Germanic languages. Sievers was one of the Junggrammatiker of the so-called "Leipzig School". He was one of the most influential historical linguists of the late nineteenth century.
Della vita degli studi e degli scritti di Gulielmo Grataroli filosofo e medico, 1788 Giovanni Battista Gallizioli or Gallicciolli (17 May 1733 – 12 May 1806) was an Italian philosopher, hebraist, orientalist, historian, archaeologist and philologist,Gallicciolli, Giovanni Battista catholic priest and citizen of the Republic of Venice.
Nina Novak prima ballerina is a dance national prize of 1996, Harry Abend, is a national prize winning sculptor, and Maria Magdalena and Andrzej Antczak are recognized archaeologists. Andres Gluski is CEO of AES. Ángel Rosenblat was a philologist, essayist and hispanist. Mieczysław Detyniecki is a painter.
Vyacheslav Vsevolodovich Ivanov (, 21 August 1929 – 7 October 2017) was a prominent Soviet/Russian philologist, semiotician and Indo-Europeanist probably best known for his glottalic theory of Indo-European consonantism and for placing the Indo-European urheimat in the area of the Armenian Highlands and Lake Urmia.
Later members included Ahmed Kamal, Egypt's first native Egyptologist, as well as Ahmad Zaki Pasha, a pioneering philologist. The Institut returned to Cairo in 1880. Its previous name was made official by a royal decree in 1918. Henceforth, it was directly under the Royal Palace's auspices.
Bicheldei Kaadyr-ool Kaadyr-ool Bicheldey (; born January 2, 1950) is a Russian philologist and politician of Tuvan descent.Bicheldey's profile at the State Duma archives website. Nowadays he is the director of the Tuvan National Museum "Aldan-Maadyr"Website of the Tuvan National Museum "Aldan-Maadyr".
Grey had philological interests and was Bleek's patron during his time as Governor of the Cape. The two had a good professional and personal relationship based on an admiration that appears to have been mutual. Bleek was widely respected as a philologist, particularly in the Cape.
Günther Zuntz (28 January 1902 – 3 April 1992), German-English classical philologist, professor of Hellenistic Greek and Bible scholar. He obtained a D.Phil. from the University of Marburg in 1928 and was later a professor at the University of Manchester. Zuntz was born in Berlin in 1902.
Alexander Pavlovich Chudakov (; February 2, 1938, Shchuchinsk - October 3, 2005, Moscow) was a Russian philologist and writer, known for his study of Chekhov, and for the novel A Gloom is Cast Upon the Ancient Steps, which was awarded the Russian Booker Prize of the decade in 2011.
Sikelianos published his poetic work in three volumes in 1946 and 1947. The collection's title was "Lyric Life". He left, however, several poems unpublished. In 1965 G.P. Savvides, a leading Greek philologist, started to publish the entire poetic work of Sikelianos, which finally comprised five volumes.
Alfred Erich Senn (April 12, 1932 – March 8, 2016) was a professor of history at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.Jungtinių Amerikos Valstijų Lietuviai: biografijų žinynas, Vol. 2 (Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos institutas, 2002: ), p. 231. Senn was born in Madison, Wisconsin, to Swiss philologist and lexicographer, .
Luis Nicanor Pablo Díaz González-Viana, (Zamora, June 1951), is a Spanish anthropologist, philologist and writer. He is considered a pioneer of Spanish anthropology specializing in popular culture, ethnology and identities. He is a researcher at the Spanish National Research Council (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas-CSIC).
Mikhail Leonidovich Slonimsky (; – 8 October 1972) was a Soviet writer, member of the Serapion Brothers group. Mikhail was born in Saint Petersburg to the family of Intelligentsia. His grandfather, father and aunt were professional writers. His uncle Semyon Vengerov was a famous philologist and literary critic.
A Dutch philologist, Prof. Dr. C.C. Berg, has found several versions of Kidung Sunda. Out of them he has discussed and published two versions: # Kidung Sunda # Kidung Suṇḍâyana (The journey of the Sundanese) The former is longer than the latter. It also has better literary merits.
Notable fellows of Somerville College include philosopher G. E. M. Anscombe, classical archaeologist Margarete Bieber, Egyptologist Käthe Bosse-Griffiths, biologist Marian Dawkins, classicist Edith Hall, author Alan Hollinghurst, astronomer Chris Lintott, International Federation of University Women founder Rose Sidgwick, botanist Timothy Walker, and philologist Anna Morpurgo Davies.
Eter Tataraidze was born in Zemo Alvani, Akhmeta municipality, Georgia. She graduated from Tbilisi State University in 1984 as a philologist. 1985–2006 she worked in the Department of Folklore by the Tbilisi State University. Eter Tataraidze is the author of thirteen books, including six poetic collections.
Jakob Jonas Björnståhl (1806) Jakob Jonas Björnståhl (January 23, 1731 in Rotarbo – July 11, 1779 in Thessaloniki), Swedish orientalist and Greek philologist from the Lund University.Jakob Jonas Björnståhl, Nordisk familjebok, Björnståhl, 1904–1926, p. 603. He was a manuscript collector (minuscule 901, minuscule 902, and minuscule 1852).
Vilhelm Peter Grønbech (14 June 1873 - 21 April 1948) was a Danish philologist and historian of religion. He was professor of the history of religion at the University of Copenhagen and also had a great influence on Danish intellectual life, especially during and after World War II.
Pavol Jozef Šafárik University in Košice (Slovak Univerzita Pavla Jozefa Šafárika v Košiciach) is a university located in Košice, Slovakia. It was founded in 1959 and is organized into five faculties. The university is named after Pavel Jozef Šafárik, a 19th-century Slovak philologist, poet, and historian.
Sir Allen Mawer (8 May 1879 − 22 July 1942) was an English philologist. A notable researcher of Viking activity in the British Isles, Mawer is best known as the founder of the English Place-Name Society, and as Provost of University College London from 1929 to 1942.
Portrait of Eugene Aram, from the Newgate Calendar. Eugene Aram (170416 August 1759) was an English philologist, but also infamous as the murderer celebrated by Thomas Hood in his ballad, The Dream of Eugene Aram, and by Edward Bulwer- Lytton in his 1832 novel Eugene Aram.
He has also been credited for his contributions to strengthening and enriching the Nynorsk language and its use in the public sphere. Raknes was known as a thorough philologist and a controversial therapist. Internationally he was known as one of Wilhelm Reich's closest students and defenders.
Yuriy Ivanovich Kovbasenko (born 26 October 1958, Horodyshche, Cherkasy Oblast) is a Ukrainian philologist and teacher. He is author of over 200 scientific works on philology and literary education, including monographs, tutorials for middle and high school, approved by the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine.
Walter Friedrich Gustav Hermann Otto (22 June 1874, in Hechingen – 23 September 1958, in Tübingen) was a German classical philologist particularly known for his work on the meaning and legacy of Greek religion and mythology, especially as represented in his seminal 1929 work The Homeric Gods.
Jean Clédat (7 May 1871 – 29 July 1943) was a French Egyptologist, archaeologist and philologist. He became a resident at the (French Institute of Oriental Archaeology). At various times, Clédat's expeditions was sponsored by (the Suez Canal Company), the Supreme Council of Antiquities, the , and the itself.
Portrait of Jan Gaspar Gevartius, by Rubens Pompa introitus honori Serenissimi Principis Ferdinandi Austriaci Hispaniarum Infantis John Gaspar Gevartius or Jan Caspar Gevaerts (1593-1666) was the jurisconsult of Antwerp and in his lifetime a famous philologist. He was a personal friend of Peter Paul Rubens.
Nabilah Lubis (born Nabilah ‘Abdel Fattah, , on March 14, 1942) is an Indonesian philologist, writer, translator and lecturer. Nabilah is an Egyptian woman who was married by a Batak Mandailing man from Medan named Burhanuddin Umar Lubis, so she changed her last name to Nabilah Lubis.
Friedrich Stählin (8 April 1874, Nördlingen, Germany - 22 June 1936, Erlangen, Germany) was a German Classical Philologist and teacher. He studied the Classical Greek language and his book, Das hellenische Thessalien was published in 1924. He also contributed to the Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft.Eckart Olshausen: Stählin, Friedrich.
Anthony Stanley Richard Rundle OBE (September 1913 – 17 September 1978) was a British politician and philologist. Rundle was born in Wales, and grew up bilingual in Welsh and English.Graham Lippiatt, "Liberals and Local Government in London since the 1970s", Journal of Liberal History, no.58, p.
Robert Angus Brooks (1920-1976) was an American philologist and under secretary at the Smithsonian Institution.Robert Angus Brooks at the SIA archives.Further Robert Angus Brooks at the SIA archives. He also served as Assistant Secretary of the Army for Installations and Logistics under the Johnson Administration.
In 1947, the University of Heidelberg awarded him the Kuno Fischer Prize for Vom Mythos zum Logos. On the same date Nestle began to go blind. He died at the age of ninety-four. One of his sons was the classical philologist Walter Nestle (1902–1945).
Olga Freidenberg (March 15, 1890 in Odessa - July 6, 1955 in Leningrad) was a Russian and Soviet classical philologist, one of the pioneers of cultural studies in Russia. She is also known as the cousin of the famous writer Boris Pasternak; their correspondence has been published and studied.
Andreas Aarskog Bjørkum (30 March 1932 – 1 April 2014) was a Norwegian philologist who specialized in dialectology. He was born in Årdal and grew up in Nattvik. He finished his secondary education at Eidsvoll in 1953 and graduated from the University of Oslo with the cand.philol. degree in 1962.
Ottar Nicolai Grønvik (21 October 1916 – 15 May 2008) was a Norwegian philologist and runologist. He was a lecturer from 1959 and associate professor from 1965 to 1986 at the University of Oslo. His doctoral thesis, which earned him the dr.philos. degree in 1981, was Runene på Tunesteinen.
Irina Sarishvili-Chanturia (b. 24 December 1963, Tbilisi), is a Georgian NGO leader, formerly actively involved in national politics.Council of Europe, Irine Sarishvili-Chanturia, National Democratic. Deputy. Parliament of Georgia A philologist by education, she graduated from the Faculty of Western Literature at Tbilisi State University in 1984.
Karabakhname () is an opera by Franghiz Ali-Zadeh.www.science.gov.az, Operas by Franghiz Ali-Zadeh The libretto is by philologist-scientist Nargiz Pashayeva.azertag.az, Public opinion regarding Karabakhname The premiere of the work was put on the stage of the Azerbaijan State Academic Opera and Ballet Theater on December 15, 2007.
Alongside the aforementioned writer Alfred Bosch, doctor Moisès Broggi, journalist , writer , philosopher Josep Maria Terricabras, politician , singer and lawyer , the platform’s collaborators include singer-songwriter Lluís Llach, actor , Sopa de Cabra singer Gerard Quintana, politician and philologist Jordi Carbonell, director Ventura Pons, actor , journalist and writer , and theatre critic .
Abū Yūsuf Ya‘qūb Ibn as-Sikkīt () was a philologist tutor to the son of the Abbasid caliph Al-Mutawakkil and a great grammarian and scholar of poetry of al-Kūfah school. He was punished on the orders of the caliph and died shortly after between 857 and 861.
Gordon Hall Gerould, B.A., B.Litt. (1877–1953) was a philologist and folklorist of the United States. Born in Goffstown, New Hampshire, he joined the faculty of Bryn Mawr College and was a professor of English at Princeton University. In 1910 he married fellow writer Katharine Elizabeth Fullerton Gerould.
Lee Milton Hollander (October 22, 1870 – January 2, 1947) was an American philologist who specialized in Old Norse studies. Hollander was for many years head of the Department of Germanic Languages at the University of Texas at Austin. He is best known for his research on Old Norse literature.
Kjell Venås (30 November 1927 – 7 March 2018) was a Norwegian philologist. He was born in Hemsedal, and took his dr.philos. degree in 1967. He spent most of his career at the University of Oslo; as a lecturer from 1970 to 1971 and professor from 1971 to 1997.
It forms in fumaroles and in caves. It occurs with kalinite, alunogen, epsomite, melanterite, copiapite and gypsum. It was first described in 1844 for an occurrence in Cerros Pintados, Pampa del Tamarugal, Iquique Province, Tarapacá Region, Chile. It was named for American linguist and philologist John Pickering (1777–1846).
Ienăchiţă Văcărescu, portrait by Anton Chladek Ienăchiță Văcărescu (; 1740 – July 11, 1797) was a Wallachian Romanian poet, historian, philologist, and boyar belonging to the Văcărescu family. A polyglot, he was able to speak Ancient and Modern Greek, Old Church Slavonic, Arabic, Persian, French, German, Italian, and Ottoman Turkish.
Ihor Ševčenko (; 10 September 1922 – 26 December 2009) was a Polish-born philologist and historian of Ukrainian origin. Byzantinist and paleo-Slavic professor of classical philology at Harvard University. He died 26 December 2009The Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute announces the death of its co- founder in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Irving Leonard Finkel (born 1951) is a British philologist and Assyriologist. He is currently the Assistant Keeper of Ancient Mesopotamian script, languages and cultures in the Department of the Middle East in the British Museum, where he specialises in cuneiform inscriptions on tablets of clay from ancient Mesopotamia.
Louis-Mathieu Langlès Louis-Mathieu Langlès (23 August 1763 – 28 January 1824) was a French academic, philologist, linguist, translator, author, librarian and orientalist. He was the conservator of the oriental manuscripts at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Napoleonic FranceTathagatananda, Swami. "How Vedanta Came to the West," Saveda. August 15, 2005.
Christoph Scheibler Christoph Scheibler (born 6 December 1589 in Armsfeld, died 10 November 1653 in Dortmund) was a German philosopher, classical philologist, Lutheran theologian and metaphysician. He was Professor of Logic and Metaphysics at the University of Giessen from 1610. He was appointed as Superintendent, i.e. Bishop, in 1625.
In 1785, Titsingh was appointed director of the trading post at Chinsurah in Bengal. Titsingh was described by William Jones, the philologist and Bengal jurist, as "the Mandarin of Chinsura".Jones, William. (1835). Memoirs of the life, writings and correspondence of Sir William Jones, by Lord Teignmouth. London.
Martí de Riquer i Morera, 8th Count of Casa Dávalos (, ) (3 May 1914 – 17 September 2013) was a Spanish–Catalan literary historian and Romance philologist, a recognised international authority in the field. His writing career lasted from 1934 to 2004. He was also a nobleman and Grandee of Spain.
Grigor Ghapantsyan (Kapantsian, , 1887 - 1957) was an Armenian historian, orientalist, linguist and philologist, Doctor of Philological Sciences, Professor, Academician of the Academy of Sciences of Armenia, Honored Scientist of the Armenian SSR.Yerevan State University Notable Scholars and Prominent Figures/Compiled by K. Grigoryan. Yerevan, YSU Press, 2020, p. 47.
Zofia Szmydt was born in Warsaw on 29 July 1923. Her mother, Zofia Szmydtowa (née Gąsiorowska), was a historian and philologist. Szmydt studied at the University of Warsaw in clandestine classes during the Second World War. Following the Warsaw Uprising, she and her family were deported to Krakow.
Alexandru Hâjdeu (Алекса́ндр Фадде́евич Хижде́у, 30 November 1811 – 9 November 1872) was a Russian writer of Romanian origin, who lived in Bessarabia (Russian Empire). He was the father of Romanian writer and philologist Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu. Alexandru Hâjdeu was one of the founding members of the Romanian Academy.
His world map, drawn in 1513, is the oldest known Turkish atlas showing the New World. The map was rediscovered by German theologian Gustav Adolf Deissmann in 1929 in the course of work cataloging items held by the Topkapı Palace library.A. Gerber, Deissmann the Philologist, Berlin, 2010, 198–201.
"Carvalho Calero será el homenajeado en el Día das Letras Galegas". El País, 22 June 2019. after to 1981) (Ferrol, 1910 – Santiago de Compostela, 1990) was a Spanish philologist, academic and writer. He was the first Professor of Galician Language and Literature at the University of Santiago de Compostela.
Harold Herman Bender (April 20, 1882 – August 16, 1951) was an American philologist who taught for more than forty years at Princeton University, where he served as chair of the Department of Oriental Languages and Literature. He was the chief etymologist for Webster's New International Dictionary, Second Edition.
Harald Trygve Heltveit (8 December 1913 – 21 August 1985) was a Norwegian philologist. He was born in Balestrand as a son of teacher Olav Heltveit (1873–1959) and Petra Sættevik (1878–1947). In 1943 he married Erna Røisum. He became a student in 1936 and graduated with the cand.philol.
Elizabeth Maria Lloyd was born in 1812/13. Her father was Hannibal Evans Lloyd (1770–1847), a Welsh philologist and translator. Her mother was Lucy Anna Margaretta von Schwartzkopff (1782/3–1855), from Hamburg. She read English classics under her father, and received education about morals from her mother.
Józef Jeżowski (1793-1855) was a Polish philologist and poet. Friend of Adam Mickiewicz and Tomasz Zan. Founder of the Philomatic Association, in 1824 convicted by the Russian Empire activity for pro-Polish activity and exiled into Russia. Allowed to lecture at Kazan State University and later Moscow University.
297, 388 with philologist Petru Creția calling them the "Luceafărul constellation". Antonio Patraș, "Eminescu, poet al nopții. Lecturi în palimpsest", in Convorbiri Literare, February 2015 Its earliest recognizable component is Fata-n grădina de aur ("Girl in the Garden of Gold"), written ca. 1873, when Eminescu was in Berlin.
Johann Georg Wilhelm Pape (3 January 1807 – 23 February 1854) was a German classical philologist and lexicographer. He is known today primarily as the author of his Griechisch-Deutsches Handwörterbuch [Concise Greek-German Dictionary], first published in 1842 and frequently reprinted in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
One scholarly theory proposes that the Logothete also contributed the first Romanian version of Neagoe Basarab's political manual, or Teachings, and a hagiography of Niphon Kausokalybites.Nicolescu, p. 38; Tănăsescu, p. 184 Philologist Sextil Pușcariu attributes him a second hagiographic translation, which tells the story of Great Martyr Catherine.
Calvert Watkins (/ˈwɒtkɪnz/; March 13, 1933 – March 20, 2013) was an American linguist and philologist, known for his book How to Kill a Dragon. He was a professor of linguistics and the classics at Harvard University and after retirement went to serve as professor-in-residence at UCLA.
Geraldo Calábria Lapenda (born December 6, 1925 in Nazaré da Mata; died December 19, 2004 in Recife) was a Brazilian philologist and university professor. Lapenda is known for his extensive work on the indigenous languages of South America. He spent decades teaching at the Federal University of Pernambuco.
Theodor Gartner (November 4, 1843 -- April 29, 1925) was an Austrian linguist, Romance philologist and professor. He is also known for his study of the Ukrainian language and as a co-author (with Stepan Smal-Stotsky) of the monograph and textbook on the grammar of the Ukrainian language.
Death-mask of Tutankhamun. Pierre Lacau (25 November 1873 - 26 March 1963) was a French Egyptologist and philologist. He served as Egypt's director of antiquities from 1914 until 1936, and oversaw the 1922 discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun in the Valley of the Kings by Howard Carter.
A musician and a philologist live in the two biggest Greek cities, Athens and Thessaloniki. They are both married, but when they fall in love between them, they collide with their families. Eventually, their relationship ends to a dead-end mostly because of the distance of their residence places.
Henri-Georges Dottin (29 October 1863 - 11 January 1928) was a French philologist, professor for Greek language and literature at the University of Rennes, succeeding Joseph Loth in 1911. He dedicated himself to the study of the Celtic languages and the culture and mythology of the ancient Celts.
Luko Zore (; January 15, 1846 - November 26, 1906) was a philologist and Slavist from Dubrovnik. He was one of the leaders of the opposition to Austro- Hungarian Empire and Italy in Dubrovnik and a member of the Serb Catholic movement in Dubrovnik. Later in life he lived in Montenegro.
Lipsius made a number of separate copies of apparently the same material and these versions do not always agree. In addition, scholars conclude that the numerous errors and inconsistencies in the fragments point not only to some carelessness or inattentiveness by the Renaissance scholars but also to errors in the now lost manuscript out of which the material was copied. The language of the Psalms suggests that they were originally written in the 10th century. A number of editions exist, among others by the 19th- century Dutch philologist Willem Lodewijk van Helten and, more recently, the diplomatic edition by the American historical linguist Robert L. Kyes (1969) and the critical edition by the Dutch philologist Arend Quak (1981).
The pair lived in the Sui dynasty (581-618), and their work ensured the long term survival of the Shuowen. The well-known philologist Duan Yucai (段玉裁 1735–1815) of the Qing dynasty (1644-1912) dedicated his life to studying the Shuowen, and produced the authoritative version and commentary still used today, the Shuowen Jiezi Zhu 说文解字注 (the Annotated Shuowen Jiezi). Xu Shen's work also provides a valuable resource for linguistic research. Duan Yucai based much of his research on the Shuowen, and the philologist Zhu Junsheng's () phonological study Explanatory Book of Sounds 说文训定生 was written as a companion to the Shuowen.
The manuscripts were discovered in Freising, Bavaria. The Slovene name Brižinski spomeniki (literally 'Brižinj Monuments') was coined by the Carinthian Slovene philologist Anton Janežič, who Slovenized the German name Freising to Brižinj in 1854.Pogačnik, Jože & Franc Zadravec. 1968. Zgodovina slovenskega slovstva: Srednji vek, reformacija in protireformacija, manirizem in barok.
Lyavon Barshchewski () (born March 4, 1958) is a Belarusian philologist and opposition politician. Born on March 4, 1958 in Polotsk, Barshchewski graduated from Minsk State Linguistic University in 1980. He was a deputy to the Supreme Soviet of Belarus from 1990 to 1996. He is a member of PEN International.
Dorothea Frances Bleek (later Dorothy F. Bleek; born 26 March 1873, Mowbray, Cape Town – died 27 June 1948, Newlands, Cape Town)Standard Encyclopaedia of Southern Africa vol. 2 was a South African-born German anthropologist and philologist known for her research on the Bushmen (the San people) of southern Africa.
Felipe Maíllo Salgado (Born in Monforte de la Sierra, Salamanca in 1954). Philologist, historian and Spanish Novelist. Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies at Salamanca University, accredited as Professor by the Spanish University Council in 2008. Awarded the "María de Maeztu" prize to research excellence by Salamanca University, in 2010.
David Adams Leeming (born February 26, 1937) is an American philologist who is Professor Emeritus of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Connecticut. Leeming is considered a leading authority on the comparative literature of mythology, a subject on which he has written widely and edited numerous encyclopedias and dictionaries.
Joseph Albert Alberdingk Thijm (born at Amsterdam, 8 July 1820; d. there, 17 March 1889) was a Dutch writer. In his triple capacity of art critic, philologist, and poet, Thijm was an important figure of Catholic literature. After finishing his studies in his native city, he took up a commercial career.
Wife – Belousov (Bondareva) Elizabeth Feodorovna (5 May 1925 – 26 November 1991). Philologist, she taught at the State University of Moldova. Children: Alexander Valentinovich (03.10.1948 – 3 September 1998), PhD in physics, senior research fellow of the Academy of Sciences of Moldova; Tatiana Valentinovna Kravchenko (born 16 February 1952), a doctor neurologist.
The first confirmed ascent was made by 1843 John Ball, Wilhelm Richter, Carl Ritter, a Polish philologist, a Hungarian landscape painter and three Polish mountain guides.Wilhelm Richter, Wanderungen in Ungarn und unter seinen Bewohnern, 1844, pp.419-420 In 1843, the first ascent was recorded, via Suchý žlab (Dry Couloir).
Ludvig Holm-Olsen (9 June 1914 – 10 June 1990) was a Norwegian philologist. He was born in Tromøy as a son of shipmaster and accident investigator Peter Olsen (1866–1950) and Louise Holm (1885–1969). He was a nephew of Magnus Olsen. Since 1941 he was married to Elsa Dorothea Triseth.
Hiltgunt Margret Zassenhaus (10 July 1916 – 20 November 2004) was a German philologist who worked as an interpreter in Hamburg, Germany during World War II, and later as a physician in the United States. She was honoured for her efforts to aid prisoners in Nazi Germany during World War II.
Adolphe Rome (July 12 1889, Stavelot – 9 April 1971, Korbeek-Lo) was a Belgian classical philologist and science historian who was particularly concerned with the ancient history of astronomy.Franz de Ruyt: Notice sur le chanoine Adolphe Rome, membre de l'Academy . In: Annuaire de l'Académie royale de Belgique vol. 138, 1972, pp.
Konráð Gíslason Konráð Gíslason (3 July 1808 – 26 January 1891) was an Icelandic grammarian and philologist, and one of the Fjölnismenn, a group of Icelandic intellectuals who spearheaded the revival of Icelandic national consciousness in the 19th century. He was by royal appointment member of the 1949 Danish Constituent Assembly.
Antoni Puig i Blanch (, also known as Antoni Puigblanch) (Mataró, Spain 1775 - Somers Town, London 1840) was a Spanish philologist and politician. He was living in London during 1815-1820 and 1823-1840. There he published The Inquisition unmasked (1816), translation of the book that had caused his exile from Spain.
Eduard Schwyzer (15 February 1874, Zürich – 3 May 1943, Berlin) was a Swiss Classical philologist and Indo-European linguist, specializing in Ancient Greek and Greek dialects.TITUS-Galeria: Schwyzer at Titus.uni-frankfurt.de (uni-frankfurt.de) He was a professor in Zürich 1912-1926, in Bonn from 1927 and in Berlin from 1932.
Lorenzo Hervas Lorenzo Hervás y Panduro was a Spanish Jesuit and famous philologist; born at Horcajo, 1 May 1735; died at Rome, 24 August 1809. He is one of the most important authors, together with Juan Andrés, Antonio Eximeno or Celestino Mutis, of the Spanish Universalist School of the 18th century.
Ernst Friedrich Johann Dronke (1797–1849) was a German philologist and educator. Dronke was born on 28 June 1797 in Falkenberg. He studied philology and history at the Silesian Friedrich-Wilhelms-University in Breslau, then at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Berlin. Subsequently, he taught at the Royal Gymnasium in Koblenz.
Juan d'Ors was born in Madrid, Spain, December 8, 1957. His grandfather was the philosopher and art critic Eugeni d'Ors. He is the son of Juan Pablo d'Ors Pérez, a humanist doctor, and María Luisa Fuhrer, a philologist. He is a singer, musician, actor, writer, film-maker, and "Tintin" expert ("Tintinologist").
He published a chapter about the Vetulani family in the book Sanok – nasza tożsamość (Sanok – our identity). He is married to Grażyna Vetulani, Roman philologist and professor at the Adam Mickiewicz University. They have two daughters: Agnieszka (born 1981), a political and jurisprudence scientist, and Maria (born 1996), a fencer.
A replica can be found in the new Meritxell Basilica, designed in 1976 by Ricardo Bofill. The Catalan philologist Joan Coromines says that "Meritxell" is a diminutive of merig, from the Latin meridiem (midday in English). Merig is a name used by shepherds to denote a pasture with lot of sun.
His obituaries attest to the respect accorded both his clerical standing in the church and his status as a scholar by describing him as a "well-known Presbyterian divine" and a "distinguished scholar and clergyman...a man of fine literary attainments, distinguished as a philologist" at the time of his death.
She also authored naturalist short stories that dealt with suburban tramps, craftsmen or small merchants from a moralist viewpoint. In 1881, she published a two-act comedy, Un tutor. Her first husband was the philologist Vasile Burlă; she later married chemist Petru Poni.Aurel Sasu (ed.), Dicționarul biografic al literaturii române, vol.
Jost Winteler (21 November 1846 - 23 February 1929) was a Swiss professor of Greek and historyIsaacson (2007), p. 27. at the Kantonsschule Aarau (today called the Old Cantonal School Aarau), a linguist,Marková (2003), p. 183. a “noted” philologist,Brown (2018), p. 252. an ornithologist, a journalist,Overbye (2001), p. 12.
Modern English has two plurals for the word dwarf: dwarfs and dwarves. Dwarfs remains the most commonly employed plural. The minority plural dwarves was recorded as early as 1818. However, it was later popularized by the fiction of philologist and legendarium author J. R. R. Tolkien, originating as a hypercorrective mistake.
They have three sons - Ott-Siim Toomet, Lauris Kaplinski, Lemmit Kaplinski. He has a daughter, Elo- Mall Toomet, from his first marriage marriage to Küllike Kaplinski. He previously had a long-term relationship to Estonian classical philologist and translator Anne Lill, with whom he has a son, composer Märt-Matis Lill.
Carl Abel (25 November 1837 - 26 November 1906) was a German comparative philologist from Berlin who wrote Linguistic Essays in 1880. Abel also acted as Ilchester lecturer on comparative lexicography at the University of Oxford and as the Berlin correspondent of the Times and the Standard.Herbert Baynes: C. Abel. Linguistic Essays.
Isaac Casaubon (;"Casaubon, Isaac". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary. ; 18 February 1559 - 1 July 1614) was a classical scholar and philologist, first in France and then later in England, regarded by many of his time as the most learned man in Europe. His son Méric Casaubon was also a classical scholar.
Edwin Norris (24 October 1795 – 10 December 1872) was a British philologist, linguist and intrepid orientalist who wrote or compiled numerous works on the languages of Asia and Africa; his best-known works are his uncompleted Assyrian Dictionary and his translation and annotation of the three plays of the Cornish Ordinalia.
Emmanuel Kriaras Emmanuel G. Kriaras (Greek: Εμμανουήλ Γ. Κριαράς; 28 November 1906 – 22 August 2014) was a Greek lexicographer and philologist. He was Emeritus Professor of the School of Philosophy at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. He was a student of Jean Psychari and the practice and ideology of demotic Greek.
Oberlin, Ohio, a Christian colony, and its centerpiece, Oberlin College, a liberal arts college, were named for him upon their founding in 1833. J. F. Oberlin University in Tokyo, Japan, which was named for Oberlin College, also bears his name. His brother Jérémie Jacques Oberlin was a noted archaeologist and philologist.
Jarle Bondevik (29 June 1934 – 4 April 2016) was a Norwegian philologist. He was born in Sogndal, and took the a cand.philol. degree at the University of Bergen in 1961. He worked as a lecturer at Aarhus University from 1961 to 1963, and at Bergen Teacher's College from 1963 to 1972.
From 1888 onward, he was a member of the Saxon Academy of Sciences. In 1900 he was named a Saxon privy court councilor. He was a brother of archivist Ernst Wülcker (1843–1895),Wülker Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon and a son-in-law to classical philologist Ludwig Lange (1825–1885).
Pius Alibek Hermez (Ainkawa, Iraqi Kurdistan, 1955) is an Iraqi philologist and restaurateur of Assyrian ethnicity. He studied English philology in Baghdad, and continued his studies afterwards in London. He has focused his career on comparative historical linguistics and the origin and evolution of languages. He arrived in Barcelona in 1981.
Radomerščak () is a settlement in the Municipality of Ljutomer in northeastern Slovenia. The area traditionally belonged to the Styria region and is now included in the Mura Statistical Region.Ljutomer Municipality site The Slovene philologist Franz Miklosich was born in the village in 1813. His birth house is preserved as a museum.
Joseph Anglade (1868–1930) was a French philologist. He specialized in Romance languages, particularly Occitan, and studied the lyrics of the troubadours. He was instrumental in formalizing the term Occitan for the language of Provence. He founded the Societat d'Estudis Occitans (SEO) in Toulouse, a predecessor of the Institut d'Estudis Occitans.
Politically, he supported increased devolution of powers to the Indian provinces and a limited increase in Indian participation in the civil service. His son, James Peile, became a clergyman, later Archdeacon of Warwick and Archdeacon of Worcester. His first cousin was the philologist John Peile.Dictionary of National Biography, 1912 supplement, vol.
She was a maternal granddaughter of philologist Johan Peter Weisse, and a paternal granddaughter of agriculturalist and politician Bent Holtsmark. She was a niece of politicians Bernt and Torger Holtsmark, and a sister of professors Johan and Anne Holtsmark. She married Haakon R. Brækken in July 1936, but the marriage was dissolved.
Walter Couvreur (1914–1996) was a Belgian philologist and for some ten years a Flemish politician. He studied classical and Oriental languages. He was a professor of Hittite and Tocharian at the University of Ghent. Couvreur published in 1947 the first comparative grammar of Tocharian that fully took Western Tocharian into account.
Adrian Papahagi (born 20 March 1976, Cluj) is a Romanian philologist, essayist and politician. In 2014, he was one of the founders of PMP (Partidul Mișcarea Populară). In March 2015, he founded, together with Monica Macovei a new political party, M10. Adrian Papahagi is currently professor at the Babeș- Bolyai University, in Cluj.
Joaquín García Icazbalceta Joaquín García Icazbalceta (August 21, 1824 – November 26, 1894) was a Mexican philologist and historian. He edited writings by Mexican writers who preceded him, wrote a biography of Juan de Zumárraga, and translated William H. Prescott's Conquest of Mexico. His works on Colonial Mexico continue to be cited today.
Igor de Rachewiltz (April 11, 1929 – July 30, 2016)The International Who's Who 1996-97 (Europa Publications, 1996: ), p. 392. was an Italian historian and philologist specializing in Mongol studies. Igor de Rachewiltz was born in Rome, the son of Bruno Guido and Antonina Perosio. The de Rachewiltz family was of noble roots.
Alegría Bendayán de Bendelac (April 19, 1928 – April 5, 2020) was a Venezuelan philologist, professor, writer and Jewish poet. During her career she dedicated to studying sephardic culture, especially the Judeo-Spanish language of northern Morocco. She was professor of French at the University of Pennsylvania and published several works about sephardic traditions.
The view was rejected by the philologist Franz Boll (1867–1924). Two modern translators of ancient astrological texts insist that the text does not use the technical terms for either a heliacal or an acronycal rising of a star. However, one concedes that Matthew may have used layman's terms for a rising.
Jovan Stejić (Stari Arad, Habsburg Monarchy, 1803 – Belgrade, Principality of Serbia, 23 November 1853) was a Serbian writer, philologist, critic of Vuk Karadžić's reform and medical doctor.Ružić Z. Nedeljković R, et al. Istorija zdravstvene kulture Kragujevca i njen uticaj na savremenu zdravstvenu zaštitu ovog područja. Med Čas 1998; 1–2: 40–9.
Marc Sautet (25 February 1947 – 3 March 1998) was a French writer, teacher, translator (mainly of Nietzsche), and philosopher. He was a Doctor of Philosophy (B. Litt.) at the Paris Institute of Political Studies. Sautet was a former Trotskyist who however edited two books on the German philosopher and philologist Friedrich Nietzsche.
Wilhelm Aarek (17 April 1907 – 26 December 1999) was a Norwegian philologist and educationalist. He was a cand.philol. by education, and was appointed as a lecturer in the English language at Kristiansand Teacher's College in 1938. He had also applied for a job at Stavanger Cathedral School, but was rejected by the government.
Konrad Hartvig Isak Rosenvinge Nielsen (28 August 1875 – 27 November 1953) was a Norwegian philologist. He spent most of his career as a professor at the Royal Frederick University (University of Oslo) as a lecturer, textbook writer, lexicographer and translator. His specialty was Sami languages, also called Lapp languages in his day.
Fürstenschule Grimma, where Wunder taught from 1823 to 1846. Now known as the Gymnasium St. Augustine. Eduard Wunder (1800–1869) was a German philologist, and from 1843 to 1866 Rector of the Fürstenschule Grimma in Saxony.Gymnasium St. Augustin zu Grimma (Hg.): Von der kurfürstlichen Landesschule zum Gymnasium St. Augustin zu Grimma 1550 – 2000.
Arnos Pathiri, a grammarian, lexicographer and philologist, composed Puthen Pana, which is based on Jesus Christ's life, between 1721 and 1732. Puthen Pana has 14 padams (canto). In the 12th padam, the most important, Mother Mary laments at the Crucifixion of the Christ. The Jesuit Missionary arrived in India on 13 December 1700.
Gerolamo Araolla was born into a distinguished family. He was a pupil of the Sassari physician and philologist Gavino Sambigucci. After studying literature and philosophy, Araolla graduated with a law degree from the University of Pisa in 1567. Shortly after graduation, he took his vows and became a priest in Bosa in 1569.
Philosophische Signaturen des 20. Jahrhunderts, Bibliothek Metzler vol. 5, Stuttgart 1991, p. 103-116. The classical philologist and epigraphist Reinhold Merkelbach suggests that this is the case because Ocnus had been "tardy" in seeking initiation in the Eleusinian Mysteries, but there is no direct evidence for this in the surviving literary resources.
Otto Karl Weinreich (1886–1972) was a German classical philologist. He is noted for his study of the Lukan Befreiungswunder through his work Gebet und Wunder. Weinrich's works were focused on the so-called liberation miracles such as the miracles of the Dionysian "circles" (e.g. Dionysos' prison escape in the Euripides play Bacchae).
Memorial stone for Peder Syv at Hellested, placed by the people of Hellested in 1921. Its caption says "The plant of youth is the fruit of old age. Philologist and proverb collector Peder Syv, priest in Hellested 1664–1702." In Peder Syv's era, Danish was primarily a spoken language with little prestige.
For health reasons, Deiters retired on 1 October 1903, and he died in Koblenz on 11 May 1907 at the age of 73. Deiters was married first to Agnes Burkart, who died in 1884, and from 1886 to Sibylla Heimsoeth, the daughter of the philologist and musicologist . The two marriages produced seven children.
Father — Paata Shevardnadze, Doctor of Philological Science in the USSR, author of philological and philosophical studies, international diplomat, worked as a career diplomat with UNESCO for 20 years. Mother — Nina Akhvlediani, philologist, English language specialist, literary translator from French and English into Georgian. Brother — Lasha Shevardnadze, entrepreneur. Sisters — Mariam and Nanuli Shevardnadze.
The collection included 217 pieces and previously belonged to Prakhov's father, famous Russian art historian, philologist, archaeologist, and critic Adrian Prakhov (1846-1916). Adrian Prakhov went to Egypt many times to study ancient artifacts. Later, the holdings of the Department of the Ancient East were enhanced through gifts, archaeological excavations, and regular acquisitions.
Kirpichenko died on 3 December 2005. His wife, Valeriya Nikolaevna, was a philologist and specialist in Arabic literature with the Institute of Oriental Studies at the Russian Academy of Sciences. She outlived him, dying in 2015. Their son, Sergei Vadimovich, was born in 1951, and like his parents specialised in Middle Eastern affairs.
'Matrena Vakhrusheva (' also ) 12 April 1918-1 January 2000) was a Mansi linguist, philologist and writer. She is considered a pioneer in the development of Mansi literature and orthography for the Mansi language. She was the first Mansi woman to earn a scientific degree and co-wrote the first Mansi-Russian dictionary.
Christopher Andreas Holmboe Christopher Andreas Holmboe (19 March 1796– 2 April 1882) was a Norwegian philologist, orientalist and numismatist. Holmboe was born at Vang in Oppland, Norway. He was son of parish priest Jens Holmboe and brother of mathematician Bernt Michael Holmboe. He attended the Oslo Cathedral School and graduated as cand.theol.
200px Martin Persson Nilsson (Stoby, Kristianstad County, 12 July 1874 – Lund, 7 April 1967) was a Swedish philologist, mythographer, and a scholar of the Greek, Hellenistic and Roman religious systems. In his studies he combined literary evidence with archaeological evidence, linking historic and prehistoric evidence for the evolution of the Greek mythological cycles.
Friedrich Ludwig Abresch (29 December 1699, Homburg - 1782) was a Dutch philologist of German origins. Born in Homburg, the reasons that led him to move to the Netherlands are uncertain. He visited the college in Herborn and the University of Utrecht. He was a scholar of Karl Andreas Duker and Arnold Drakenborch.
Josef Gusten Algot Svennung (January 17, 1895 - March 11, 1985) was a Swedish classical philologist. He was Professor of Latin Language and Literature at Uppsala University from 1944 to 1961. Svennung is particularly known for his research on what Jordanes and other classical writers wrote about Scandza and the rest of Northern Europe.
Members included Ernst Troeltsch, Max Weber, Eberhard Gothein, Georg Jellinek, Karl Rathgen, and Wilhelm Windelband.A. Gerber, Deissmann the Philologist, pp. 69-71. In Berlin, Deissmann's academic focus began to shift from Greek philology to the ecumenical movement, church reform and, significantly, international Völkerverständigung (i.e. peace-promoting mutual understanding between nations and cultures).
Rezachevici, pp. 53, 56–57 Moreover, Alecsandri claimed that the story of Mărăcine's career in the Kingdom of France had been found in his folkloric source.Eliade, p. 5 Philologist Alexandru Ciorănescu, who doubts that Mărăcine even existed, sees the work as a sample of Alecsandri inventing tradition, as he had already done elsewhere.
Alfredo Alvar Ezquerra (Granada, 1960) is a Spanish historian, research professor at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and modern history specialist. He is a correspondent academician at the Royal Academy of History and associated professor at the Complutense University of Madrid. He is son to Manuel Alvar, a prominent Spanish philologist.
Robert Priebsch (1866-1935) was a German professor and philologist. From 1898 to 1931 he was a professor at University College London. With one of his students, W. E. Collinson, he published The German Language (1934). His two- volume Deutsche Handschriften in England (Erlangen 1896-1901) is a standard in the field.
Adolf Tobler (24 May 1835 - 18 March 1910) was a Swiss-German linguist and philologist. Born in Hirzel in Zürich, Switzerland, he was the brother of linguist Ludwig Tobler (1827–1895). Adolf Tobler died in Berlin, Germany. He studied Romance philology at the universities of Zürich and Bonn, receiving his doctorate in 1857.
Among the most famous teachers are the poet Giovanni Pascoli, who taught there between 1882 and 1884, the philologist and literary critic Antonio Restori, the archaeologist Giuseppe Botti, the poet, writer and literary critic Giuseppe Lipparini, the geographer Arcangelo Ghisleri, the journalist Paolo Orano, the philosopher Vito Fazio Allmayer, the writer and literary critic Gioacchino Brognoligo. Among others, that graduated; the literary critic Giuseppe De Robertis, the philosopher and historian of philosophy Eustachio Paolo Lamanna, the classical philologist Nicola Festa, the painter Luigi Guerricchio, the anthropologist Giovanni Battista Bronzini, the academician and partisan Giambattista Salinari, the poet Michele Rigillo, the Greek scholar and Latin scholar Vincenzo D'Addozio (Chief of Staff of the Ministry of Education). Rocco Montano literary critic and Dantist, among the students and teachers.
Notovitch's book generated controversy as soon as it was published. The philologist Max Müller expressed incredulity at the account presented and suggested that either Notovitch was the victim of a practical joke or he had fabricated the evidence.Simon J. Joseph, "Jesus in India?" Journal of the American Academy of Religion Volume 80, Issue 1 pp.
Landmann was the son of economist Julius Landmann and philosopher Edith Landmann. Philologist Georg Peter Landmann is his brother. His parents were friends of Stefan George and were connected to the Georgekreis, a circle of writers inspired by George. Since his father had worked in Kiel, Landmann attended a gymnasium there from 1927 to 1933.
Tauno F. Mustanoja Tauno Frans Mustanoja (1912–1996) was a professor of English Philology and Literature at the University of Helsinki, Finland. He was a philologist and scholar of Medieval and Middle English. He was also a major influence in initiating what became the widespread study and use of the English language in Finland.
Yang Bojun (; 1 September 1909 − 1992) was a Chinese philologist best known for his Chunqiu Zuozhuan Zhu (), an annotated commentary of the ancient Chinese historical text and Confucian classic Zuo Zhuan. The work took him more than twenty years to finish. His commentaries of the Analects of Confucius and the Mencius are also highly influential.
Stepanos Sargsi Malkhasyants (; - July 21, 1947) was an Armenian academician, philologist, linguist, and lexicographer. As an expert in classical Armenian literature, Malkhasyants wrote the critical editions and translated the works of many classical Armenian historians into modern Armenian and contributed 70 years of his life to the advancement of the study of the Armenian language.
René Antoine Gauthier (1913-1999) was a French Dominican friar, philologist and historian of philosophy. Gauthier joined the Dominican order as a novice in 1933, in the Lyon province, taking his professio on 3 November 1934. He studied in Saint-Alban-Leysse. After his military service of 1936-1937 he was ordained in 1940.
Marcus MeibomiusKnown as Marcus, Marc or Mark Meibom, Meiboom or Maybaum. (c. 1630, Tönningen – 1710/1711, Utrecht) was a DanishOr possibly German, from Holstein. scholar. He is best known as a historian of music, as an antiquarian, and as the first librarian at the Denmark's Royal Library. He was also a philologist and mathematician.
Bohdan Horyn was born on February 10, 1936 in the village of Kniselo, Zhydachiv raion, Lviv region. He graduated from Ivan Franko Lviv State University, Faculty of Philology in 1959. He became a philologist and a teacher of Ukrainian language and literature. In 1988 he was one of the founders of the Ukrainian Helsinki Union.
Anders Larsen: Beaiveálgu – Dagen gryr. In the fall of 1949, the same year that he died, Larsen sent a manuscript about Sea Sami life and living conditions to the philologist Just Knud Qvigstad. Qvigstad translated it into Norwegian and published it as Om sjøsamene (The Sea Sami) in 1950.Larsen, Anders, & Just Knud Qvigstad. 1950.
The Academy had 8 faculty members, who included philologist Leon Borowski, philosopher Anioł Dowgird, historian Paweł Kukolnik. The Academy closely cooperated with Vilnius Priest Seminary. Around 1840, the Tsarist authorities suspected that the students were planning another uprising. Therefore, the academy, including its students, professors, and library, was moved to Saint Petersburg in August 1842.
Norwalk, Conn: 2009. / 978-0-615-23249-2 The findings of Injia were supported and shared by the representatives from various literary circles, scholars and researchers from Georgia and the US: Gia Papuashvili – documentary movie producer and philologist;Papuashvili, Gia. This Literary Cheating Has Been Revealed. "Akhali Epoqa" ("New Epoch"), insert "Chveni mtserloba" ("Our Literature").
The Johann Heinrich Voß Prize in Translation () is awarded yearly by the German Academy for Language and Poetry.Homepage of the Johann Heinrich Voss Prize with List of Award-Winners Established 1958, it was named after the German poet and philologist Johann Heinrich Voß. Not to be confused with the Johann-Heinrich-Voß-Preis für Literatur.
On November 7, 1972, the writer Daniel Sueiro interviewed María Moliner in the Heraldo de Aragón. The headline was a question: "Will María Moliner be the first woman to join the Academy?". Dámaso Alonso, Rafael Lapesa and Pedro Laín Entralgo had recommended her. But the linguist and philologist Emilio Alarcos Llorach was elected instead.
City plan of creating lots was finished by 1905 and in 1907 a green square was built at the place of the Mitropolitova bašta and in 1924 the name of the neighborhood is changed to Kopitareva Gradina ("Kopitar's garden"), after Jernej Kopitar, Slovene philologist and collaborator of Vuk Karadžić, major reformer of the Serbian alphabet.
She never married, but lived with her companion Myfanwy Williams. She was sister to Alfred O'Rahilly, a noted academic, President of University College Cork and Teachta Dála (TD) for Cork City, and Thomas Francis O'Rahilly an Irish scholar of the Celtic languages. Their great-grand uncle was noted Irish philologist and antiquary Eugene O'Curry.
The estate dates from the Middle Ages. The first known owner was Peder Fleming, who bought the farm in 1652. In the late 18th century, Katthamra was acquired by merchant andshipbuilder Jacob Dubbe (1769-1844). Among the owners of the house were Nils Ihre, ancestor of philologist and historical linguist Johan Ihre (1707–1780).
Valeriu Munteanu (October 4, 1921 - December 20, 1999) was a Romanian philologist, lexicographer, and translator. After studying law in Sibiu and Cluj, he studied philology in Bucharest, and Nordic languages in Uppsala, Sweden. He translated into Romanian writers such as Hjalmar Bergman, August Strindberg, Artur Lundkvist, Hans Scherfig, Herman Bang, Sigrid Undset, Knut Hamsun.
Otto Schrader (born 28 March 1855 in Weimar; died 21 March 1919 in Breslau) was a German philologist best known for his work on the history of German and Proto-Indo-European vocabulary dealing with various aspects of material culture, such as the names of domesticated plants and animals, the names of the metals, etc.
Matthias Bernegger by Peter Aubry. Matthias Bernegger (, also Matthew;Jerzy Dobrzycki: The reception of Copernicus' heliocentric theory, International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science. Nicolas Copernicus Committee born 8 February 1582 in Hallstatt, Salzkammergut, died 5 February 1640 in Strassburg) was a German philologist, astronomer, university professor and writer of Latin works.
In addition to the small portions that attempt to recall Homer, the poem is heavily modeled off Virgil's Aeneid. This is so much the case that Marulić's contemporaries called him the "Christian Virgil from Split."Gutsche (1975), p. 310. The philologist Miroslav Marcovich also detects "the influence of Ovid, Lucan, and Statius" in the work.
William Dwight Whitney (; February 9, 1827June 7, 1894) was an American linguist, philologist, and lexicographer known for his work on Sanskrit grammar and Vedic philology as well as his influential view of language as a social institution. He was the first president of the American Philological Association and editor-in-chief of The Century Dictionary.
Karo Ghafadaryan (; April 20, 1907December 21, 1976) was a Soviet Armenian archaeologist, historian, epigraphist, philologist. He was the director of the History Museum of Armenia (1940–1965). "Under his guidance, the Museum became an advanced research and cultural-educational centre" in Armenia. Born in Akhaltsikhe, he graduated from the Yerevan State University in 1931.
Painting in Hellested Kirke assumed to depict Peder Syv Peder Pedersen Syv (also spelled Siuf) or in Latin Petrus Petri Septimius (February 22, 1631 – February 17, 1702) was a Danish philologist, folklorist and priest, known for his collections of Danish proverbs and folksongs, and his contributions to the development of Danish as a written language.
Karl Gustav Vollmöller (or Vollmoeller; 7 May 1878 – 18 October 1948) was a German philologist, archaeologist, poet, playwright, screenwriter, and aircraft designer. He is most famous for the elaborate religious spectacle- pantomime The Miracle and the screenplay for the celebrated 1930 film The Blue Angel (Der blaue Engel), which made a star of Marlene Dietrich.
Walther Preusler (1956),. and by Patricia Poussa (1990). were marginal to the academic consensus of their time. Perhaps more famously, Oxford philologist and author J.R.R. Tolkien expressed his suspicion of Brittonic influence and pointed out some anomalies in support of this view in his 1955 valedictory lecture English and Welsh, in which Tolkien cites Förster.
An Introduction to the Old Turkish Runic Inscriptions. Verlag auf dem Ruffel, Engelschoff. . The script is named after the Orkhon Valley in Mongolia where early 8th-century inscriptions were discovered in an 1889 expedition by Nikolai Yadrintsev. These Orkhon inscriptions were published by Vasily Radlov and deciphered by the Danish philologist Vilhelm Thomsen in 1893.
Eva Mary "Barbara" Reynolds (13 June 1914 - 29 April 2015) was an English scholar of Italian Studies, lexicographer and translator. She wrote and edited several books concerning Dorothy Sayers and was president of the Dorothy L. Sayers Society. She turned 100 in June 2014. Her first marriage was to the philologist and translator Lewis Thorpe.
Ioan Bogdan Ioan Bogdan (b. July 25, 1864, Șcheii Brașovului, Austrian Empire - d. June 1, 1919, Bucharest, Romania) was a Romanian linguist, historian and philologist, the author of studies on the language of Slavic and Romanian documents and creator of Slavo-Romanian philology. In 1903, Bogdan was elected a titular member of the Romanian Academy.
Robert Shackleton CBE (25 November 1919 - 9 September 1986) was an English French language philologist and librarian. Shackleton was born in Todmorden, now in West Yorkshire. He was educated at Oriel College, Oxford and taught French at Brasenose College, Oxford from 1946 to 1966. He also served as college librarian from 1948 to 1966.
George J. Adler (1821, Leipzig, Germany – August 24, 1868, New York, New York) was a noted philologist and linguist.Who Was Who in America: Historical Volume, 1607–1896. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1963. Adler arrived in the United States in 1833 and graduated valedictorianDictionary of American Biography, pg 107. from New York University in 1844.
Giorgio Valla (Latin: Georgius Valla; Piacenza 1447–Venice 1500) was an Italian academic, mathematician, philologist and translator. He was born in Piacenza in 1447. He was the son of Andrea Valla and Cornelia Corvini. At the age of fifteen Giorgio Valla moved to Milan, where he was educated by the famous Neoplatonic Hellenist Constantine Lascaris.
He was an architect in the classical tradition. Jefferson's keen interest in religion and philosophy led to his presidency of the American Philosophical Society; he shunned organized religion but was influenced by both Christianity and deism. A philologist, Jefferson knew several languages. He was a prolific letter writer and corresponded with many prominent people.
James Eyre (1748–1813), was an English philologist. Eyre was educated at Trinity College, Oxford and Caius College, Cambridge. The DNB gives his college as Catharine Hall, Cambridge. He became head-master of Solihull Grammar School for thirty years until his death, and rector of Winterbourne Stoke (1801–13) and Nettleton (1802-13) in Wiltshire.
Ida Falbe-Hansen Ida Mariette Helene Falbe-Hansen born Hansen (1849–1922) was a Danish educator, philologist and women's activist. A pioneer in the teaching of Swedish, she published textbooks and promoted Swedish literature in Denmark. She was also active on the board of the Danish Women's Society and chaired the Danish Women's Council.
Andrey Venediktovich Fyodorov (Russian: Андре́й Венеди́ктович Фёдоров, April 19, 1906 – November 24, 1997) was a Soviet philologist, translator, literary translation theorist, one of the founders of Soviet translation theory, and professor. For 15 years (1963–1979), he was the chairman of the Department of German Philology at Saint Petersburg State University (formerly Leningrad State University).
Ernst Ranke – German theologian, 1886 Ernst Constantin Ranke (10 September 1814, Wiehe – 30 July 1888, Marburg an der Lahn) was a German Protestant theologian; since 1850, a professor of church history. He was the brother of historian Leopold von Ranke (1795–1886), theologian Friedrich Heinrich Ranke (1798–1876) and philologist Karl Ferdinand Ranke (1802–1876).
George Gibb Nicholson (1875–1948), often referred to as G. G. Nicholson, was an English-born Australian philologist and professor of French. He was the inaugural McCaughey Professor of French at University of Sydney.Angus Martin, "The Teaching of French at Sydney", Arts: The Journal of the Sydney University Arts Association, Vol. 14 (1989), p. 49.
179–180 while philologist Alexandru Lambrior unsuccessfully proposed to set the Romanian literary standard exclusively on words used by Beldiman and Conachi.Panu, pp. 171–173 Beldiman's work was finally rediscovered in the 1890s. One of its promoters was the antiquarian George Ionescu-Gion, who insisted that Beldiman was without philosophical merit, but a genuine patriot.
Karl Ludwig von Urlichs. Karl Ludwig von Urlichs (November 9, 1813 - November 3, 1889) was a German philologist and archaeologist born in Osnabrück. He was the father of archaeologist Heinrich Ludwig Urlichs (1864-1935). He received his education at the University of Bonn, where he was a student of Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker (1784-1868).
Franz Ferdinand Benary (22 March 1805, Kassel - 7 February 1880, Berlin) was a German orientalist and exegete. He was the older brother of classical philologist Agathon Benary. From 1824 he studied theology and oriental languages at the universities of Bonn, Halle and Berlin. At Halle he was especially influenced by the teachings of Wilhelm Gesenius.
Noach Pryłucki. The photo was probably taken between 1919 and 1927, when he was a Sejm member. Noach (Nojach) Pryłucki or Noach Prilutski (1 October 1882 in Berdichev - 12 August 1941 in Vilnius) was a Jewish Polish politician from the Folkspartei. He was also a Yiddish linguist, philologist, lawyer and scholar of considerable renown.
Adam Marian Kleczkowski (born 25 March 1883 in Kraków, died 17 November 1949 in Kraków) was a Polish philologist and Professor of Linguistics at the Jagiellonian University. He was a member of the Polish Academy of Learning. He was a specialist in German linguistics.Biogramy uczonych polskich, Część I: Nauki społeczne, zeszyt 2: K-O (eds.
Friedrich Christian Diez Friedrich Christian Diez (15 March 179429 May 1876) was a German philologist. The two works on which his fame rests are the Grammar of the Romance Languages (published 1836-1844), and the Etymological Dictionary of the Romance Languages (1853, and later editions). He spent most of his career at University of Bonn.
After the break-out of World War I, Cranz and her family fled from Belgium to Traifelberg near Reutlingen, where Cranz learned to ski. Afterwards the family moved to Grindelwald and Freiburg. Alongside her apprenticeship as trainer and philologist she started a successful ski racing career. In 1934, she won all titles at the German Championship.
Jacob Alting Jacob Alting (27 September 1618 – 20 August 1679) was a Dutch philologist and theologian. He was professor at the University of Groningen: in 1643 in oriental languages and in 1667 in theology. His publications were overseen in 1687 by Balthasar Bekker. Alting was born in Heidelberg, where his father Hendrik Alting was a professor.
First in the respectable literary quarterly Literatura na Świecie (No 10(90), Warszawa, October 1978, pp. 4–116); then as a separate book (Warszawa, 1979). In Romania, The Blind Owl was translated from Persian into Romanian in 1996 by the orientalist philologist Gheorghe Iorga, under the title Bufnița oarbă. A revised second edition came out in 2006.
Georg Heinrich Ferdinand Nesselmann (February 14, 1811 in Fürstenau, near Tiegenhof, West Prussia (now Kmiecin, within Nowy Dwór Gdański) - January 7, 1881 in Königsberg) was a German orientalist, a philologist with interests in Baltic languages, and a mathematics historian.Moritz Cantor, "Nesselmann: Georg Heinrich Ferdinand". In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. Vol. 23, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1886, p. 445.
The work was initiated by philologist Jakob Sverdrup in 1936, who edited the dictionary until his death in 1938. After his death linguist and educator Marius Sandvei took over the responsibility as editor. The first edition of the dictionary was published in 1940 by the publishing house Johan Grundt Tanums forlag, with the title Norsk Rettskrivningsordbok.
Nathan Bailey (died 27 June 1742), was an English philologist and lexicographer. He was the author of several dictionaries, including his Universal Etymological Dictionary, which appeared in some 30 editions between 1721 and 1802. Bailey's Dictionarium Britannicum (1730 and 1736) was the primary resource mined by Samuel Johnson for his Dictionary of the English Language (1755).
The most important source for the battle is the 16th Century chronicle of the Bavarian Renaissance humanist, historian, and philologist Johannes Aventinus (Annalium Boiorum VII), (1477–1534), which contains the most comprehensive descriptions. Despite being written 600 years after the events, it is based on manuscripts written at the time of the battle that are since lost.
Laura Borràs i Castanyer (born 5 October 1970) is a Spanish Catalan philologist, academic and politician. Born in 1970 in Barcelona, Borràs studied philology at the University of Barcelona (UB) before becoming an academic. She taught at UB and the Open University of Catalonia. Between 2013 and 2018 she was director of the Institució de les Lletres Catalanes.
Mehr Abdul Haq (Urdu:; , Layyah, British India – Multan, Pakistan)Bio- Bibliographies: مہر عبدالحق ،ڈاکٹر was a philologist from Pakistan. After completing his education he joined education department where he worked on different posts. He retired in 1970. He got his PhD degree from University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan in “Multani Zaban ka Urdu se taaluq”.
Will P. Brady was born on 12 February 1876 in Austin, Texas. His parents, James and Agnes Brady, were early settlers of the city, having arrived five years earlier. Will Brady was one of five children; his siblings were John W., David John, Agnes, and Helen Brady. He was also the uncle of, among others, the philologist Caroline Brady.
Karl Friedrich August Alfred Gercke (20 March 1860, Hannover - 26 January 1922, Breslau) was a German classical philologist. He is known for his research pertaining to the history of Greek philosophy, in particular, Hellenistic philosophy, and for his studies involving Seneca the Younger.Baader, Gerhard, "Gercke, Karl Friedrich August Alfred" in: New German Biography 6 (1964), p 258.
Aleksandar Loma (; born March 2, 1955) is a Serbian philologist and a corresponding member of the Serbian Academy of Science and Arts since October 30, 2003. Aleksandar Loma emphasized that Serbian epic poetry about Kosovo events is older than the events it describes, having its origin in the pre- Christian and pre-Balkan periods of Serbian history.
In 1999 UNESCO marked Kochar's centennial as one of the "outstanding dates" in world art. In 2010 Armenia's Union of Artists opened an exhibit dedicated to Yervand Kochar's artistic legacy marking 110 years since the artist's birth. He was married to philologist Manik Mkrtchyan (1913–1984), with whom he had two sons, Haykaz Kochar (1946) and Ruben Kochar (1953).
Kerenyi, pp. 196–197; Hammond, "SELENE" pp. 970–971. Philologist Max Müller's interpretation of solar mythology as it related to Selene and Endymion concluded that the myth was a narrativized version of linguistic terminology. Because the Greek endyein meant "to dive," the name Endymion ("Diver") at first simply described the process of the setting sun "diving" into the sea.
Gu Yanwu () (July 15, 1613 – February 15, 1682), also known as Gu Tinglin (), was a Chinese philologist and geographer. He spent his youth during the Manchu conquest of China in anti-Manchu activities after the Ming dynasty had been overthrown. He never served the Qing dynasty. Instead, he traveled throughout the country and devoted himself to studies.
Kurt Heinrich Sethe. Kurt Heinrich Sethe (30 September 1869 - 6 July 1934) was a noted German Egyptologist and philologist from Berlin. He was a student of Adolf Erman. Sethe collected numerous texts from Egypt during his visits there and edited the Urkunden des ægyptischen Altertums which is a standard catalogue of Ancient Egyptian literature and text.
Erich Auerbach (November 9, 1892 - October 13, 1957) was a German philologist and comparative scholar and critic of literature. His best-known work is Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature, a history of representation in Western literature from ancient to modern times and frequently cited as a classic in the study of realism in literature.
Lyle Eslinger notes that Cragie's approach was "a melding of conservative theological interests and assumptions with the scientific methods of biblical criticism." Tremper Longman describes him as being "among the best of recent evangelical interpreters" as well as "an astute theologian and philologist".Tremper Longman, Old Testament Commentary Survey, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1999) p. 76.
The inscriptions were discovered by Nikolay Yadrintsev's expedition in 1889, published by Vasily Radlov. The original text was written in the Old Turkic alphabet and was deciphered by the Danish philologist Vilhelm Thomsen in 1893. Vilhelm Thomsen first published the translation in French in 1899. He then published another interpretation in Danish in 1922 with a more complete translation.
Stanisław StrońskiStanisław Stroński (1882 - 1955) was a Polish philologist, publicist and politician (a National Democracy Sejm deputy). In interwar Poland he edited the Rzeczpospolita newspaper and was a professor at Kraków's Jagiellonian University and at the Catholic University of Lublin. During World War II he was a member of the Polish government in exile, serving as information minister.Engel, David.
Joseph Edkins (19 December 1823 – 23 April 1905) was a British Protestant missionary who spent 57 years in China, 30 of them in Beijing. As a Sinologue, he specialised in Chinese religions. He was also a linguist, a translator, and a philologist. Writing prolifically, he penned many books about the Chinese language and the Chinese religions especially Buddhism.
She was born in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway. She was the daughter of Sigge Pantzerhielm Thomas (1886-1944) and Signe Dorothea Undset (1887-1973). Her father was a classical philologist and lecturer at the University of Oslo. She completed a master's degree in archaeology in 1946 at the University of Oslo, writing her thesis on Viking costume and jewellery.
Georgios Babiniotis Georgios Babiniotis (; born 6 January 1939) is a Greek linguist and philologist and former Minister of Education and Religious Affairs of Greece. He previously served as rector of Athens University. As a linguist, he is best known as the author of a Dictionary of Modern Greek (Λεξικό της νέας ελληνικής γλώσσας), which was published in 1998.
Walter Eugene Clark (September 8, 1881 – September 30, 1960), was an American philologist. He was the second Wales Professor of Sanskrit at Harvard University and editor of the volumes 38-44 of the Harvard Oriental Series. He translated the Aryabhatiya of Aryabhata with critical notes which was published in 1930, by the University of Chicago Press.
James Jenkins resided in the Manor of Alverton, near Penzance. Edward Lhuyd (1660–1709), the Celtic philologist, spent four months in 1700 in Cornwall learning Cornish as the basis for his planned Cornish-English vocabulary. His main informants included James Jenkins, John Keigwin, the Reverend Henry Ustick and Nicholas Boson. Lhuyd published a phonetically spelled transcript of Jenkins' verses.
Heinrich Körting (15 March 1859 – 19 July 1890) was a German philologist and a brother of Gustav Körting. Like his brother he was a Romance scholar. He was born in Leipzig, became Privatdozent in 1885, and in 1889 an associate professor at the University of Leipzig. He was co-editor of the journal Zeitschrift für neufranzösische Sprache und Literatur.Prof.
During the Second World War, she provided money for Allan O. Hagedorff, a young Dane living in Germany, to assist Jews. Using money provided by Nielsen, Hagedorff sent so many food parcels to the Theresienstadt concentration camp that he was warned by the Gestapo. Among others, Victor Klemperer, the diarist and philologist, was offered money by Hagedorff.
Rabinowitz (1957), p. 4. In 1888, working off Bywater and the German philologist Hermann Usener, the classicist Hermann Alexander Diels found a fragment of Hortensius in the Soliloquies of Augustine that seemed to connect with a section in a fragment of the Protrepticus. This, he contended, was additional proof that Cicero depended upon Aristotle.Rabinowitz (1957), p. 10.
Pavle Ingorokva Pavle Ingorokva (; January 1, 1893 in Poti - November 20, 1983 in Tbilisi) was a Georgian historian, philologist, and public benefactor. He graduated from the University of St. Petersburg (1916). In 1917 he was one of the founders of the Union of Georgian Writers. In 1917-1919 he was a member of the "National Council of Georgia".
Wilhelm Meyer (philologist). Wilhelm Meyer (1 April 1845, Speyer – 9 March 1917, Göttingen) was a German classical scholar, initially a librarian and literary scholar, who worked also on musicology. He became professor of Classical and Medieval Latin Philology at the University of Göttingen. He was known as Meyer aus Speyer (Meyer from Speyer), from his birthplace Speyer.
Wheeler Hall is a building on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley in Berkeley, California in the Classical Revival style. Home to the English department, it was named for the philologist and university president Benjamin Ide Wheeler. The building was opened in 1917. It houses the largest lecture hall on the Berkeley campus, Wheeler Auditorium.
Tom Clark Conley (born 1943) is an American philologist. He is Lowell Professor in the Departments of Romance Languages and Visual and Environmental Studies at Harvard University where he studies relations of space and writing in literature, cartography, and cinema. He and his wife Verena are Faculty Deans of Kirkland House.House Masters: Tom and Verena Conley.
The second chairman (until his death in 1934) was Evan Vincent Evans. By profession an accountant and journalist, he was a friend of Welsh politicians and a stalwart of eisteddfodau and the Cymmrodorion. The early commissioners, included Edward Anwyl (died 1914), another philologist, professor of Welsh and Comparative Philology at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth.
Urve Tiidus was born on 6 June 1954 in Rapla. She studied at Tallinn School No. 21 and graduated from the University of Tartu as an English philologist in 1977. After graduation, she started her career in television. She has also been a news anchor of Aktuaalne kaamera, a popular Estonian evening news programme on ETV.
Jan Inge Sørbø (born 16 September 1954) is a Norwegian philologist, author and poet. He was born at Bru in Rennesøy municipality in Rogaland, and took the cand.philol. degree in the history of literature at the University of Bergen in 1982.Profile at Dagbladet He debuted as a poet in 1986, and has also written novels.
Born in Tbilisi, Maia Panjikidze is the daughter of the writer Guram Panjikidze. A philologist trained at the universities of Tbilisi and Jena, she taught German in Tbilisi before joining the foreign service in 1994. Most of her career was associated with the Georgian embassy in Berlin. She briefly served as Deputy Foreign Minister in 2004.
Turid Farbregd (born 1941) is a Norwegian philologist and translator. She was awarded the Bastian Prize in 1989, for her translation of poetry by Jaan Kaplinski into Norwegian language. She received the Norwegian Critics Prize for Literature in 2013, for her translation of Katja Kettu's book Kätilö (The Midwife) into Norwegian. She was appointed Government scholar in 1995.
Alfons Hilka und Otto Schumann, 2 vols, Heidelberg 1930. The two based their edition on previous work by Munich philologist Wilhelm Meyer, who discovered that some pages of the Codex Buranus had mistakenly been bound into other old books. He also was able to revise illegible portions of the text by comparing them to similar works."Fragmenta Burana", ed.
Sabir Rustamkhanli (Azerbaijani: Sabir Khudu oğlu Rüstəmxanlı) is an Azerbaijani poet and philologist. He is the author of over 30 books in the Russian and Persian languages. Sabir Rustamkhanli is chairman of the Assembly of the World Congress of Azerbaijanis. Also he is leader of the Civic Solidarity Party and member of the National Assembly of Azerbaijan.
Zare Alievna Yusupova (Russian: Заре Алиевна Юсупова; born 1934) is a Russian philologist specializing in the Kurdish language. Yusupova holds a Doctor of Philological Sciences degree and works as a professor at the Saint Petersburg State University, where she teaches Kurdish.IOM RAS (St. Petersburg) - Personalia She has published more than 70 scientific works, including 6 monographs.
Poor Dionis remains a pioneering work in the fantasy and Romantic-era sub-chapters of Romanian literature. Romanian scholar Zoe Dumitrescu-Bușulenga describes Eminescu's "grand novella" as "one of the most beautiful and most particular works of European Romanticism".Dumitrescu-Bușulenga, p. 64 Luisa Valmarin, the Italian philologist, calls Eminescu's work "the only philosophical novella produced by Romanian Romanticism".
Mannerist painter, ca. 1533 Poor Dionis is rated by some exegetes (including Indian philologist Amita Bhose) Simona Grazia Dima, "Eminescu și filozofiile Indiei", in Luceafărul, Nr. 30/2010 as primarily a work of philosophical fiction. The historian and critic Nicolae Iorga merely saw the work as "illegible, were it not for the beauty of each passage".Iorga, p.
Sofia Polyakova (, 1914–1994) was a Soviet classical philologist, Byzantine specialist and scholar of ancient Greek and Byzantine authors. She published the first collection of the works of the Russian poet Sophia Parnok and was the first scholar to unravel the relationship of Parnok and Marina Tsvetaeva. Her work on Parnok, revived scholarly interest in the poet.
Among his tutors at Oxford, the archaeologist John Beazley and the Hellenist John Dewar Denniston exerted the greatest influence on his future work. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1930 and was awarded a Derby Scholarship. The award enabled him to spend a year at the University of Vienna with the German philologist Ludwig Radermacher.
In his castle, he established and owned a unique book collection named "Bibliotheca Zriniana". In 1660 the castle was visited by Evliya Çelebi, Turkish traveller and writer, and in 1661 by Jacobus Tollius, Dutch philologist. The famous Hungarian poet-general Miklós Zrínyi died here in 18 Nov 1664. On 30 April 1738 castle was heavily damaged in an earthquake.
Jacob Stolterfoht was married three times. On 2 October 1626 he married Dorothea Kirchmann, daughter of the Lübeck polymath- philologist Johann Kirchmann. She died on 18 June 1637, by which time the marriage had yielded seven recorded children. Three further recorded children resulted from Stolterfoht's second marriage, which took place on 25 June 1638 and was to Anna Hackhusen.
Carl Eduard Philipp Wackernagel (28 June 1800, in Berlin - 20 June 1877, in Dresden) was a German schoolteacher and hymnologist. He was an older brother of philologist Wilhelm Wackernagel. He was educated in mineralogy and crystallography at Breslau and Berlin, during which time, he also studied hymnology. While a student his influences included geologist Karl Georg von Raumer.
Else Marie Høst, née Røysland (11 March 1908–August 1, 1996) was a Norwegian literary historian and author. Else Marie Røysland was born in Stavanger, Norway. She was the daughter of Iver Johan Røysland (1870) and Gustava Aldén (1875-1932). In 1931 she married philologist Gunnar Høst (1900–1983), and became a daughter-in-law of Sigurd Høst.
Finn-Erik Vinje (born 6 March 1936) is a Norwegian philologist. He was a professor at the University of Trondheim from 1971 to 1975, and at the University of Oslo from 1975 to 2006. He was a language consultant for the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation from 1971 to 1992. He has written several books on language-related questions.
An unnamed man is taking a walking tour through the English countryside. He is later identified as Dr Elwin Ransom, a philologist. He stumbles upon a cottage where a woman is waiting for her son Harry to return. Ransom agrees to help her and goes to The Rise, the "big house" where the woman's son works.
David Castriota: Myth, Ethos, and Actuality. Official Art in Fifth-century B.C. Athens, Madison 1992, p. 277. The classical philologist Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff regards Ocnus's condition as a punishment for moral weakness, lack of courage, and shyness towards what he conceives as obligation to make up his mind.Ulrich von Wilamowitz- Moellendorff: Der Glaube der Hellenen, vol.
Agnete Loth (18 November 1921 – 2 June 1990) was an editor and translator of Old Norse-Icelandic texts. She is notable for editing late medieval romance sagas, which she published in five volumes intended "to provide a long-needed provisional basis for the study" of these sagas. In 1975 she married the Icelandic philologist and poet Jón Helgason.
Johann Alexander Döderlein (February 11, 1675 - October 23, 1745) was a German historian, philologist and numismatist. He studied at University of Altdorf near Nuremberg. He was polymath and his field of work included archaeology, classical studies, meteorology, and regional history. Döderlein was a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences and of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina.
Catalogus Professorum Rostochiensium (biographical information) In 1860 he was named Obermedizinalrat and a member of the "Grand Ducal medical commission".Zeno.org Pagel: Biographisches Lexikon He was son- in-law to classical philologist Franz Volkmar Fritzsche (1806-1887), and was the brother of pathologist Albert Thierfelder (1842-1908), who also was a professor at the University of Rostock.
Ernst Schwarz (19 June 1895 – 14 April 1983) was an Austro-Hungarian-born German philologist who was Professor of Ancient German language and Literature at Charles University, and later Professor of Germanic and German Philology at the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg. Schwarz specialized in Germanic studies, especially dialectology and onomastics, with a particular focus on the Sudeten Germans.
Liubertaitė was born on January 1, 1950 in the village of Lioliai, the district of Kėdainiai. In 1966 she graduated from the Šėta secondary school of the same district and entered the Faculty of Philology at Vilnius University. In 1972 she graduated from Vilnius University with a diploma of a philologist and a teacher of Lithuanian language and literature.
Ludwig Friedländer. Ludwig Henrich Friedlaender (July 16, 1824 – December 16, 1909) was a German philologist. He was one of the preeminent scholars of Ancient Rome of his time and is known for his research on Roman daily life and customs. He was a Professor at Albertina and served as its Rector 1865/66 and 1874/5.
In large part, such lyrical work is explicitly self-referential, and inevitably linked to his diaspora experience. His nostalgia for Râmnicu Vâlcea and Brașov slowly replaced his memory of Bucharest. As noted by philologist Andrei Bodiu, he was not Brașov's first poetic chronicler, but the only such poet to be "urban and cosmopolitan" rather than elegiac and traditionalist.Bodiu, p.
Taylor was also a Scandinavian philologist and author of a translation of The Orkneying Saga: A new translation with introduction and notes (1938), and British and Irish place-names in Old Norse literature (1953). He was awarded the degree of Doctor of Letters by the University of Edinburgh. Taylor died on 13 March 1972 at the age of 67.
Lali Kiknavelidze was born May 12, 1969 in Tbilisi, Georgia. She graduated from Tbilisi State University in 1991 as a philologist. After she is a graduate of the Shota Rustaveli Theatre and Film University (2003). In 2008 she founded a film production company CPU Lira Production,LIRA PRODUCTION STUDIOS specializing in Feature films (documentaries, fiction, animation,).
Christiane Emilie Christaller, née Ziegler, (1829 – 13 August 1866) was a German educator and missionary in Akropong in colonial Ghana. She was the first wife of Johann Gottlieb Christaller (1827–1895), a German missionary, linguist and philologist of the Basel Mission, notable for his leading role in the translation of the entire Holy Bible into the Twi language.
Hendrik Arend Hamaker was a Dutch philologist and orientalist, born in Amsterdam on 25 February 1789 and died in Nederlangbroek on 7 October 1835. He studied most European and Asian languages, and the history and geography of the East. He was an associate of the orientalist Johannes Hendricus van der Palm, and Theodor Juynboll was among his pupils.
As a philologist and a priest he taught in schools in Lamia, Lavrion, Leros, Archangelos in Rhodes and Nikaia. In 2001 he was honoured by the Holy Synod of the Church of Greece with the Gold Cross of St Paul for his activity during the Resistance. He died on 16 July 2001. He was married and had five children.

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