Henrik Birnbaum

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Henrik Birnbaum (December 13, 1925 – April 30, 2002) was an American linguist,

Slavist and historian.[1]

Education and work

Birnbaum was born in

University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and as a tenured professor at the same university in 1964-1994. He was a guest professor at many American and European universities. From 1992 he led the Department of Medieval Studies at Central European University in Budapest.[1]

He authored more than 300 scientific publications in the fields of

Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts, and since 1988 a corresponding member of the Polish Academy of Sciences.[1]

Works

  • Untersuchungen zu den Zukunftsumschreibungen mit dem Infinitiv im Altkirchenslavischen. Ein Beitrag zur historischen Verbalsyntax des Slavischen, Stockholm, 1958.
  • Slaverna och deras grannfolk. En kort orientering [The Slavs and Their Neighbors. A Short Orientation], Uppsala, 1961.
  • Studies on Predication in Russian I, Santa Monica, CA, 1964.
  • Studies on Predication in Russian II, Santa Monica, CA, 1965.
  • Problems of Typological and Genetic Linguistics Viewed in a Generative Framework, The Hague, 1970.
  • On Medieval and Renaissance Slavic Writing. Selected Essays, The Hague, 1974.
  • Common Slavic: Progress and Problems in its Reconstruction, Cambridge, MA, 1975, 21979.
  • Doktor Faustus und Doktor Schiwago. Versuch ueber zwei Zeitromane aus Exilsicht, Lisse, 1976.
  • Linguistic Reconstruction: Its Potentials and Limitations in a New Perspective, Washington, D.C., 1977.
  • Lord Novgorod the Great: Essays in the History and Culture of a Medieval City-State. Part One: The Historical Background, Columbus, OH, 1981.
  • Essays in Early Slavic Civilization / Studien zur Fruehkultur der Slaven, Munich, 1981.
  • Recent Advances in the Reconstruction of Common Slavic (1971-1982) [jointly with P.T. Merrill], Columbus, OH, 1984.
  • Lord Novgorod the Great: Sociopolitical Experiment and Cultural Achievement, Los Angeles, 1985.
  • Praslavianskii iazyk. Dostizhenia i problemy v ego rekonstruktsii, Moscow, 1987.
  • Novgorod and Dubrovnik: Two Slavic City Republics and Their Civilization, Zagreb, 1989.
  • Aspects of the Slavic Middle Ages and Slavic Renaissance Culture, New York, 1992.
  • Novgorod in Focus, Columbus, OH, 1996.

References

  1. ^
    Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža
    , 1999–2009

External links