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Encyclopedia > Hugo Schuchardt

Hugo Ernst Mario Schuchardt was born on 4 February 1842 in Gotha (Thüringen) and died on 21 April 1827 in Graz (Styria). February 4 is the 35th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ... 1842 was a common year starting on Saturday (see link for calendar). ... Gotha may refer to: A district in the German state of Thuringia A town in the District of Gotha (its capital) A former Thuringian Dukedom, see Sachsen-Gotha the Gothaer Waggonfabrik Company. ... The Free State of Thuringia (German: Freistaat Thüringen) lies in central Germany and is among the smaller of the countrys sixteen Bundesländer (federal states), with an area of 16,200 km² and 2. ... April 21 is the 111th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (112th in leap years). ... Naval Battle of Navarino by Carneray 1827 was a common year starting on Monday (see link for calendar). ... The Grazer Schloßberg Clock Tower Graz [graːts] (Slovenian: Gradec IPA: /gra. ... Styria (Steiermark in German, Štajerska in Slovenian) can refer to: Styria - a federal state of Austria Styria - an informal province in Slovenia Styria - a duchy of the Holy Roman Empire and crownland of Austria-Hungary This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that...

Contents

In Germany

Schuchardt grew up in Gotha. During 1859-1864, he studied in Jena and Bonn with many important linguists of the time, notably August Schleicher and Kuno Fischer in Jena, as well as Friedrich Ritschl and Otto Jahn in Bonn. In 1864, Schuchardt earned a doctorate with a dissertation entitled "De sermonis Romani plebei vocalibus" which in 1866-1868 was published in a three volume German language edition("Der Vokalismus des Vulgärlateins"). In 1870, Schuchardt was promoted to professor ('habilitation') at the University of Leipzig, and in 1873, Schuchardt became professor of Romance Philology at the university of Halle which was then a stronghold of the neogrammarians. During this time, Schuchardt primarily worked on classical romance topics with a strong historic orientation, but also developed an interest in language contact and language mixing. Gotha may refer to: A district in the German state of Thuringia A town in the District of Gotha (its capital) A former Thuringian Dukedom, see Sachsen-Gotha the Gothaer Waggonfabrik Company. ... Jena is a town in central Germany on the River Saale. ... Bonn is a city in Germany (19th largest), in the Federal State of North Rhine-Westphalia, located about 20 kilometres south of Cologne on the river Rhine in the north of the Siebengebirge. ... August Schleicher August Schleicher (February 19, 1821 - December 6, 1868) was a German linguist. ... Kuno Fischer, born Ernst Kuno Berthold Fischer, (July 23, 1824 - July 5, 1907) was a German philosopher. ... Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl (1806-1876), German scholar, was born in Thuringia. ... Habilitation is a term used within the university system in France, Germany, Austria, and some other European countries such as the German-speaking part of Switzerland, in Bulgaria, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, and countries of former Soviet Union, such as Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova, Kirgizstan, Kazakhstan, Russia, Uzbekistan... The Neogrammarians (also Young Grammarians, German Junggrammatiker) were a German school of linguists, originally at the University of Leipzig, in the late 19th century who proposed the Neogrammarian hypothesis of the regularity of sound change. ... Language contact occurs when speakers of distinct speech varieties interact. ...


Moving to Graz, Austria

In 1876, Schuchardt is serving as the chair for Romance Philology at the University of Graz, with the help of Johannes Schmidt. He is also doing field research travelling to Wales (1875) and Spain (1879) where he is collecting material for his celtistic and basque/romance research. Schuchardt also gets interested in two new fields, Creole and Basque linguistics, thereby becoming a respected forefather of both linguistic subdisciplines. With his 1888 publication "Auf Anlass des Volapüks" he stands up for the creation of a new 'world language' for all nations. In the same period (1885), he publishes an influential critique of the methods of the 'neogrammarians' with the title "Über die Lautgesetze. Gegen die Junggrammatiker". Johannes Schmidt is the name of . ... The word Creole (and its cognates in other languages, such as crioulo, criollo, créole, kriolu, criol, kreyol, kriulo, kriol, krio, etc. ... Basque may refer to: Look up Basque in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...


Schuchardt may be most eminent as a bascologist. L.L. Bonaparte arranges in 1887 Schuchardt's journey to the village of Sara (Lapurdi, Basses Pyrénées) where Schuchardt made a field study and seems to have learned the Basque language. Following this journey, he publishes numerous (>100!) works on basque and romano-basque, but never returns to the Basque country again. In various publications, Schuchardt is discussing possible relationships of Basque with other language families, although today Basque is known as a language isolate. Schuchardt firmly takes side with the outdated viewpoint of the Vasko-Iberian hypothesis, which stands in stark contrast to his earlier open-mindedness. A language isolate, in the absolute sense, is a natural language with no demonstrable genealogical (or genetic) relationship with other living languages; that is, one that has not been demonstrated to descend from an ancestor common to any other language. ...


Similarly, in the then actual discussion about ergativity, Schuchardt takes a strong viewpoint seeing the ergative construction as an obligatorily passive clause (as opposed to a similarly questionable theory of the ergative construction being a nominalized clause); with this viewpoint, he specifically opposes to Nikolaus Finck in Vienna with whom he has a scientific dispute in a succession of articles (cf., e.g., Finck, N. 1907: Der angeblich passivische Charakter des transitiven Verbs. in: Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung 41: 209-282.). An ergative-absolutive language (or just ergative language) is one that marks the subject of transitive verbs distinctly from the subject of intransitive verbs and the object of transitive verbs. ...


Late period

Although Schuchardt is invited to get professorships in Budapest and Leipzig (around 1890), he refuses to leave Graz. In 1900, however, Schuchardt is retiring prematurely from his chair. Being then free from his teaching duties, he undertakes prolongated travels to Southern Italy, Egypt, and Skandinavia. Then he builds a huge villa in Graz (Johann Fux Gasse nr. 30) for himself and his huge library. This villa is christianed 'Villa Malvine', after his much loved mother (Malvine von Bridel-Brideri).


The last two decades of his life, he is doing research predominantly on Basque. Disappointed from the unjust peace after WWI, the Italian irredenzia and French nationalism ('chauvinism'), he is no longer interested in Romance research, partly even giving up contacts to colleagues from these countries. In an article (Bekenntnisse und Erkenntnisse 1919), he gives some oral history insights into his youth and historic events of that time as well as his viewpoint of the outcome of WWI.


Schuchardt today

Hugo Schuchardt is one of the most eminent linguists of Austria. Today, of course, this is mainly of historiographic interest. For the Basque community, he is one of the most eminent foreign scholars, beside Wilhelm von Humboldt and only few others. Wilhelm von Humboldt Friedrich Wilhelm Christian Karl Ferdinand Freiherr von Humboldt (June 22, 1767 - April 8, 1835), government functionary, foreign diplomat, philosopher, founder of Humboldt Universität in Berlin, friend of Goethe and especially of Schiller, is especially remembered as a German linguist who introduced a knowledge of the Basque...


His huge library became part of the university library of Graz; his 'Villa Malvine' hosted the Romance philology department for a long time, but is today an administrative building of the university. Researchers in Graz have constantly worked on Schuchardt ever since, among them Michaela Wolf and the linguist Bernhard Hurch (himself being a bascologist with a strong interest in historiography of linguistics) who finally even managed to compile an online archive of the entire work of Schuchardt (see Weblinks).


References

Schuchardt, Hugo 1928: Hugo Schuchardt-Brevier: Ein Vademecum der allgemeinen Sprachwissenschaft. ed. by Leo Spitzer. rev. 2nd ed. (1st ed. 1922). Halle/Saale: Niemeyer.


Vennemann, Theo & Terence H. Wilbur 1972: Schuchardt, the neogrammarians, and the transformational theory of phonological change. Four essays by H. Schuchardt, Th. Vennemann & T.H. Wilbur. Frankfurt/M. (= Ling.Forsch. 26).


Georg Bossong 1984: Wilhelm von Humboldt y Hugo Schuchardt: dos eminentes vascólogos alemanes. in: Arbor 467/468: 163-182.


External links

  • Full information and online edition of all works at the university of Graz (Austria)
  • Works of and about Hugo Schuchardt in the DNB catalogue

  Results from FactBites:
 
Professor Dr. Hugo Schuchardt'sche Malvinenstiftung (1304 words)
Hugo Schuchardt, one of the great experts in his field, has added considerably to the international reputation of the Graz School of Philology, even beyond the field of Romance Languages and Literature.
Schuchardt was born in 1842 in Gotha and graduated in Jena and Bonn with his exemplary doctoral thesis on the Vocalism of Vulgar Latin.
The foundation is administered by a board of trustees consisting of the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities as chairperson, the professors of the Department of Romance Philology and the Director of the Botanical Gardens of Graz University as members entitled to vote.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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