Vladimir Dal
This article includes a list ofgeneral references,butit lacks sufficient correspondinginline citations.(August 2020) |
Vladimir Dal | |
---|---|
Владимир Даль | |
Born | November 22, 1801 |
Died | October 4, 1872 | (aged 70)
Resting place | Vagankovo Cemetery,Moscow |
Known for | Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Lexicography |
Vladimir Ivanovich Dal[a](Russian:Владимир Иванович Даль,[vlɐˈdʲimʲɪrɨˈvanəvʲɪdʑˈdalʲ];22 November 1801 – 4 October 1872) was aRussianlexicographer,speaker of many languages,Turkologist,and founding member of theRussian Geographical Society.[1][2]During his lifetime he compiled and documented theoral historyof the region[which?]that was later published inRussianand became part of modernfolklore.
Early life
[edit]Vladimir Dal's father was aDanishphysician named Johan Christian von Dahl (1764 – October 21, 1821), a linguist versed in the German, English, French,Russian,Yiddish,Latin,GreekandHebrewlanguages. His mother, Julia Adelaide Freytag, hadGermanand probably French (Huguenot) ancestry; she spoke at leastfive languagesand came from a family of scholars.
The future lexicographer was born in the town of Lugansky Zavod (present-dayLuhansk,Ukraine), inNovorossiya– then under the jurisdiction ofYekaterinoslav Governorate,part of theRussian Empire.(The settlement of Lugansky Zavod dated from the 1790s.) Dal grew up under the influence of varied mixture of people and cultures which existed in that area.
Dal served in theImperial Russian Navyfrom 1814 to 1826, graduating from theSaint Petersburg Naval Cadet Schoolin 1819. In 1826 he began studying medicine atDorpat University;he participated as a military doctor in theRusso-Turkish Warand in thecampaign against Polandin 1831–1832. Following disagreement with his superiors, he resigned from the Military Hospital inSaint Petersburgand took an administrative position with theMinistry of the InteriorinOrenburgGovernorate in 1833. He took part in GeneralPerovsky'smilitary expedition against Khiva of 1839-1840.[3]Dal then served in administrative positions in Saint Petersburg (1841–1849) and inNizhny Novgorod(from 1849) before his retirement in 1859.
Dal had an interest in language and folklore from his early years. He started traveling by foot through the countryside, collecting sayings and fairy tales in variousSlavic languagesfrom the[which?]region. He published his first collection offairy-tales(Russian:Русские сказки,romanized:Russkie skazki) in 1832.[4]Dal's friendAlexander Pushkin(1799–1837) put some other tales, yet unpublished, into verse. They have become some of the most familiar texts in theRussian language.After Pushkin's fatal duel in January 1837, Dal was summoned to his deathbed and looked after the great poet during the last hours of his life. In 1838 Dal was elected to theSaint Petersburg Academy of Sciences.
Lexicographic studies
[edit]In the following decade, Dal adopted the pen name Kazak Lugansky ( "Cossackfrom Luhansk ") and published several realistic essays in the manner ofNikolai Gogol.He continued his lexicographic studies and extensive travels throughout the 1850s and 1860s. Having no time to edit his collection of fairy tales, he askedAlexander Afanasyevto prepare them for publication, which followed in the late 1850s. Joachim T. Baer wrote:
While Dal was a skilled observer, he lacked talent in developing a story and creating psychological depth for his characters. He was interested in the wealth of the Russian language, and he began collecting words while still a student in the Naval Cadet School. Later he collected and recorded fairy tales, folk songs, birch bark woodcuts, and accounts of superstitions, beliefs, and prejudices of the Russian people. His industry in the sphere of collecting was prodigious.[5]
His magnum opus,Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language,was published in four huge volumes in 1863–1866.TheSayingsand Bywords of the Russian people,featuring more than 30,000 entries, followed several years later. Both books have been reprinted innumerable number of times. Baer says: "While an excellent collector, Dal had some difficulty ordering his material, and his so-called Alpha bet-nest system was not completely satisfactory untilBaudouin de Courtenayrevised it thoroughly in the third (1903–1910) and fourth (1912–1914) editions of theDictionary."[5]
Dal was a strong proponent of the native rather than adopted vocabulary. His dictionary began to have a strong influence on literature at the beginning of the 20th century; in his 1911 article "Poety russkogo sklada" (Poets of the Russian Mold),Maximilian Voloshinwrote:
Just about the first of the contemporary poets who began to read Dal wasVyacheslav Ivanov.In any case, contemporary poets of the younger generation, under his influence, subscribed to the new edition of Dal. The discovery of the verbal riches of the Russian language was for the reading public like studying a completely new foreign language. Both old and popular Russian words seemed gems for which there was absolutely no place in the usual ideological practice of the intelligentsia, in that habitual verbal comfort in simplified speech, composed of international elements.[6]
While studying at Cambridge,Vladimir Nabokovbought a copy of Dal's dictionary and read at least ten pages every evening, "jotting down such words and expressions as might especially please me";Aleksandr Solzhenitsyntook a volume of Dal with him as his only book when he was sent to the prison camp atEkibastuz.[7]The encompassing nature of Dal's dictionary gives it criticallinguisticimportance even today, especially because a large proportion of the dialectal vocabulary he collected has since passed out of use. The dictionary served as a base forVasmer'sEtymological Dictionary of the Russian Language ,the most comprehensive Slavic etymological lexicon.
For his great dictionary Dal was honoured by theLomonosovMedal, theConstantine Medal[8](1863) and an honorary fellowship in theRussian Academy of Sciences.
He is interred at theVagankovo Cemeteryin Moscow. To mark the 200th anniversary of Vladimir Dal's birthday,UNESCOdeclared the year 2000 The International Year of Vladimir Dal.
Legacy
[edit]- In 1986 a museum inMoscow,Russia, was openedin honor of Dal.
- InLuhansk,Ukraine, the home of Dal has been converted into aLiterary Museumwhere the employees managed to collect the lifetime editions of Dal's complete literary works.
- In 2001, a Luhansk (Ukraine) university was named after Dal, theEast Ukrainian Volodymyr Dahl National University(from his name inUkrainian).[9]
- In 2017,the State Literary MuseuminMoscow,Russia received a new official name: the State Museum of the History of Russian Literature named after V. I. Dal.
- On November 22, 2017,Googlecelebrated his 216th birthday with aGoogle Doodle.[10]
Damascus affair
[edit]Dal served in the Ministry of Domestic Affairs. His responsibilities included overseeing investigations of murders of children in the western part of Russia.
In 1840, theDamascus affairhad resulted in the accusation that Jews use the blood of Christian children for ritual purposes, andNicholas Iinstructed his officials, especially Vladimir Dal, to thoroughly investigate the claim. In 1844, just 10 copies of a 100-page report, intended only for the Czar and senior officials, were submitted. The paper was entitled"Investigation on the Murder of Christian Children by the Jews and the Use of Their Blood."The document stated although the vast majority of Jews had not even heard of ritual murder, such murders and the use of blood for magical purposes were committed by sects of fanaticalHasidic Jews.[11]While the paper is often attributed to Dal, the question of the authorship (or multiple authorships) remains contested.
In 1914, 42 years after Dal's death, during the blood libel trial ofMenahem Mendel BeilisinKyiv,the then 70-year-old report was published in Saint Petersburg under the titleNotes on Ritual Murders.The name of the author was not stated in this new edition, intended for the general public.[12]
Notes
[edit]- ^AlternativelytransliteratedasDahl,the original spelling of his father's surname in theLatin script.
References
[edit]- ^Encyclopædia Britannica.Vol. 7 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 731. .
- ^Blagova, G. F. (2001). "Владимир Даль и его последователь в тюркологии Лазарь Будагов" [Vladimir Dal and his follower in Turkic studies Lazar Budagov.].Voprosy yazykoznaniya - Topics in the Study of Languages(in Russian) (3). Moscow: 22–39.
- ^
Baer, Joachim T. (1972). "Biography".Vladimir Ivanovič Dal' as a Belletrist.Slavistic Printings and Reprintings. Vol. 276 (reprint ed.). Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG (published 2018). p. 25.ISBN9783110908534.Retrieved9 May2019.
In 1839 Dal' took part in the ill-fated expedition against the Sultan of Khiva, directed by his superior, the administrator of the Orenburg region, V. A. Perovskij.
- ^Русские сказки из предания народного изустного на грамоту гражданскую переложенные, к быту житейскому приноровленные и поговорками ходячими разукрашенные Казаком Владимиром Луганским. Пяток первый.Saint Petersburg: Plyushar, 1832.
- ^abTerras,Handbook of Russian Literature,p. 92.
- ^Maximilian Voloshin, "Поэты русского склада," inSovremenniki(Russian text).
- ^Brian Boyd,Vladimir Nabokov: The Russian Years(Princeton University Press, 1993), p. 171.
- ^"Constantine Medal of the IRGS".Russian Geographical Society.Retrieved25 August2015.
- ^official website East Ukraine Volodymyr Dahl National University – History sectionArchived2009-04-25 at theWayback Machine
- ^"Vladimir Dal's 216th Birthday".Google.22 November 2017.
- ^Poliakov, Léon.The History of Anti-Semitism: Suicidal Europe, 1870–1933. University of Pennsylvania Press. 2003. p.84.
- ^Léon Poliakov.The History of Anti-Semitism: Suicidal Europe, 1870–1933. University of Pennsylvania Press. 2003. p.357.
Sources
[edit]- Dal, Vladimir,Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language,Vol.I, Diamant, Sankt Peterburg, 1998 (reprinting of 1882 edition by M.O.Volf Publisher Booksellers-Typesetters)
- Terras, Victor,Handbook of Russian Literature(Yale University Press, 1990),ISBN0-300-04868-8
External links
[edit]- Vladimir Ivanovich Dal(in Russian)
- Dal Dictionary on-lineDal's Dictionary(in Russian)
- Searchable version of Dal's dictionary
- Searchable version of Dal's, Ushakov's and Ozhegov's dictionary
- Bicentennial tribute
- 1801 births
- 1872 deaths
- People from Luhansk
- People from Slavyanoserbsky Uyezd
- Converts to Eastern Orthodoxy from Protestantism
- Lexicographers from the Russian Empire
- Linguists from the Russian Empire
- Dialectologists
- Collectors of fairy tales
- Slavophiles
- Russian people of the November Uprising
- 19th-century writers from the Russian Empire
- 19th-century male writers from the Russian Empire
- Toponymists
- Turkologists
- 19th-century lexicographers
- Corresponding members of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences
- Honorary members of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences
- Founding members of the Russian Geographical Society
- Burials at Vagankovo Cemetery