Alexander Hilferding
Russian linguist and folklorist (1831–1872) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Alexander Hilferding (also spelled Aleksandar Fedorovich Giljferding; Russian: Александр Фёдорович Гильферди́нг; 14 July 1831 – 2 July 1872) was a Russian linguist and folklorist of German descent who collected some 318 bylinas in the Russian North.
Alexander Hilferding | |
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Born | (1831-02-07)7 February 1831 |
Died | 20 June 1872(1872-06-20) (aged 41) |
Education | Master's degree Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences |
Alma mater | Imperial Moscow University (1852) |
Occupation(s) | Historian, linguist, ethnographer |
A native of Warsaw, he assisted Nikolay Milyutin in reforming the administration of Kingdom of Poland. In the late 1850s, he was a Russian diplomatic agent in Bosnia; he published several books about the country and its folklore, thanks to the collaborative efforts of Prokopije Čokorilo. Hilferding was elected into the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences in 1856. He died of typhoid while collecting folk songs in Kargopol, in the north of European Russia, and was later reburied in the Novodevichy Cemetery, St. Petersburg. Hilferding's collection of Slavonic manuscripts is preserved in the Russian National Library.[1]