Ossip Maximowitsch Bodjanski

Ossip Maximowitsch Bodjanski (Russian ОсипМаксимовичБодянский, wiss. Transliteration Osip Maximovič Bodjanskij; * 31. October 10. November or 3. /15. November 1808 in Warwa with Tschernihiw, Ukraine, † 6. /18. September 1878 in Moscow) was a Russian-Ukrainian Slawist, writer and a historian.

Bodjanski visited the seminar for priests in Perejaslaw as a son of a clergyman until 1831 and studied at the university in Moscow, which he locked 1834. In the connection he worked first as Gymnasiallehrer, later on the Slawistik chair Moscow State University. 1837 were lent to it with its thesis “over the people poetry of the slawischen trunks ” the degree of Master of Arts. As a researcher it bereiste in the years 1837 to 1842 on behalf the Russian government the slawischen countries, in order to study the languages, the literature and Ethnographie the same, and took over after its return 1842 as a professor the chair for history and literature of the slawischen peoples at Moscow State University.

In February 1844 Bodjanski Taras Schewtschenko became acquainted with and corresponded several years with it; from exchange of letters two letters Bodjanskis and six are received from Schewtschenko. It contributed a substantial part by its work to the spreading Schewtschenkos seal in the slawischen countries.

1878 died Bodjanski in Moscow.

works

its chief work was the publication of the contents-rich “papers of the Muscovites society of Russian history and Altertümer “(1846-49 and 1858-78). By its own writings are to be emphasized “over the people poetry of the slawischen trunks “(1837) and” over the time of the origin of the slawischen writing “(1855).

under it Ossyp Boda Warwynez

under different aliases, (О wrote names/ aliases Bodjanski. Бода Варвинець), Isko Maternyka (ІськоМатеринка) and I. Mastak (І. Мастак). The Ukrainian way of writing of its name is Ossyp Maxymowytsch Bodjanskyj (ОсипМаксимовичБодянський)

note: Double data are first of all indicated in accordance with Julian calendar, which applied in Russia up to the October Revolution 1917, secondly in accordance with in the west since that 16. /18. Jh. used Gregorian calendar. See also: Wikipedia: Name conventions/cyrillic


 

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