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Nikolai Mikhailovich Karinsky

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Nikolai Mikhailovich Karinsky (Viatka, Imperial Russia, 22 March 1873 - Moscow, Soviet Union, 14 December 1935) was a Russian linguist, dialectologist, Slavist, correspondent member of the Russian Academy of Sciences since 1921, correspondent member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR since 1925.[1]

He graduated from St. Petersburg University in 1896 and seven years later, became a professor at his alma mater. In 1911 he taught at the Pedagogical Institute, the Institute of History and Philology (1913-1917) at the Pedagogical Institute at Viatka (1919-1923) and at the State Pedagogical Institute in Moscow (1930-1935). From 1931 he was the head of the Dialektograficheskoy Commission of the Language and Thought Institute of the USSR.[2]

He authored numerous works on the History of Russian and Old Bulgarian Language, Russian dialects,[3]and Slavic paleography.

When the Saint Petersburg Public Libary decided to prepare a folder of their most valuable Slavic manuscripts, Nikolai Karinsky, a lecturer in paleography at the Archeological Institute, was chosen to select and edit the Slavic material. The folder was published in 1914.

References

  1. ^ "Soviet Education". International Arts and Sciences Press. July 5, 1959 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "A Handbook of Slavic Studies". July 5, 1949 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ "Russian Literature Triquarterly". Ardis. July 5, 1976 – via Google Books.