Sneha Girap (Editor)

Lydia T Black

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Spouse(s)
  
Igor Black


Name
  
Lydia Black

Awards
  
American Book Awards

Lydia T. Black

Born
  
December 16, 1925
Kiev, Ukraine

Alma mater
  
Brandeis University (B.A., M.A., 1971) University of Massachusetts Amherst (Ph.D., 1973)

Occupation
  
Anthropologist, professor, translator

Notable work
  
Russians in Tlingit America

Died
  
March 12, 2007, Kodiak, Alaska, United States

Books
  
Russians in Alaska, 1732-1867, Glory remembered

Education
  
University of Massachusetts Amherst, Brandeis University

People also search for
  
Richard Dauenhauer, Nora Marks Dauenhauer, Anooshi Lingit Aani Ka

Resting place
  
Kodiak City Cemetery

Lydia T. Black (December 16, 1925 – March 12, 2007) was an American anthropologist. She won an American Book Award for Russians in Tlingit America: The Battles of Sitka, 1802 And 1804.

Contents

Life

She grew up in Kiev. Her father was executed in 1933, and her mother died of tuberculosis in 1941. During World War II, she was sent to a German forced labor camp. After the war, in Munich, she was a janitor. She was enlisted by the Americans as a translator, at the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration displaced children’s camp, since she could speak six languages. She married Igor Black, and immigrated in 1950.

She graduated from Brandeis University with a B.A., and M.A. in 1971, and University of Massachusetts Amherst with a Ph.D. in 1973. She taught at Providence College beginning in 1973. She taught at the University of Alaska Fairbanks from 1984 to 1998. She worked translating and cataloging the Russian archives of Saint Herman's Orthodox Theological Seminary, earning the Cross of St. Herman. In April 2001, she, along with fellow anthropologist and historian and close colleague Richard Pierce, historians Barbara Sweetland Smith, John Middleton-Tidwell, and Viktor Petrov (posthumous), was decorated by the Russian Federation with the Order of Friendship Medal, which they received at the Russian consulate in San Francisco.

She is buried at Kodiak City Cemetery.

Family

She married Igor A. Black (died 1969), an engineer for NASA contractors; they had four daughters.

Works

  • Russians in Alaska, 1732-1867. University of Alaska Press. 2004. ISBN 978-1-889963-04-4. 
  • Nora Dauenhauer, Richard Dauenhauer, Lydia Black, eds. (2008). Russians in Tlingit America. University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-98601-2. CS1 maint: Uses editors parameter (link)
  • The journals of Iakov Netsvetov: the Yukon years, 1845-1863. Translated by Lydia T. Black. The Limestone Press. 1984. ISBN 978-0-919642-01-0. 
  • References

    Lydia T. Black Wikipedia