William Thalbitzer

William C. Thalbitzer (February 5, 1873 in Helsingør – September 18, 1958 in Usserød) was a Danish philologist and professor of Eskimo studies at the University of Copenhagen. He studied Danish, English and Latin at the university, but after graduating in 1899 he decided to focus on "exotic" languages. In 1900 he spent a year in Ilulissat in western Greenland studying the Greenlandic language.[1] From 1905 to 1907 he with his wife spent eighteen months among the natives in Tasiilaq, one of the most isolated places on the coast of eastern Greenland.[2] In 1920 the University of Copenhagen established a permanent lecture position for Thalbitzer in "Greenlandic (Eskimo) language and culture".[3] In 1952 he was made an honorary doctor at the University of Copenhagen.[4]

Publications

  • Thalbitzer, William C. (December 1974). A Phonetical Study of the Eskimo Language, Based on Observations Made on a Journey in North Greenland 1900-1901. AMS Press. p. 405. ISBN 0-404-11692-2.
  • Thalbitzer, William C. (June 1931). The Ammassalick Eskimo: Contributions to the Ethnology of the East Greenland Natives. AMS Press. ISBN 0-404-11689-2.
  • Thalbitzer, William (c. 1947). To fjærne runestene fra Grønland og Amerika. København: Gyldendalske Boghandel.
  • Thalbitzer, William C. (1951). Two runic stones, from Greenland and Minnesota. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
  • William Thalbitzer at Find in a Library

References

  • William Thalbitzer bibliografi, 1900-1953. Meddelelser om Grønland. (in Danish). bd. 140, nr. 1. København: Reitzel. 1954. OCLC 26022462. |first2= missing |last2= in Authors list (help)
  • Erik Holtved (October 1959). "William Thalbitzer: 1873-1958 (obituary)". Man. Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 59 (59): 178–179. JSTOR 2796917.
  • "William Thalbitzer 1873-1958". International Journal of American Linguistics. 25 (4): 254. October 1959. doi:10.1086/464539. JSTOR 1263674.

Notes

  1. Erik Holtved (1958). "William Thalbitzer 5. February 1873—18. September 1958". Geografisk Tidsskrift (in Danish). 57: VI–VII. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
  2. "Studying a Disappearing Race in the Far North; Danish Ethnologist Returns from East Greenland After Spending Eighteen Months Among the Natives" (PDF). The New York Times: SM10 (Magazine Section). March 17, 1907.
  3. Eskimology and Arctic Studies
  4. Æresdoktor ved Københavns Universitet


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