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Yakub Holovatsky

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Pen name
  
Havrylo Rusyn

Ethnicity
  
Ukrainian

Name
  
Yakiv Holovatsky

Nationality
  
Halycian

Citizenship
  
Austria-Hungary

Role
  
Historian

Yakiv Holovatsky httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons99
Born
  
October 17, 1814 Chepeli, Halychyna (
1814-10-17
)

Occupation
  
historian, literary scholar, ethnographer, linguist, bibliographer, lexicographer, poet, priest, and pedagogue

Alma mater
  
University of Lviv (1841)

Died
  
May 13, 1888, Vilnius, Lithuania

Education
  
Lviv University, Greek Catholic Theological Seminary

Yakub or Yakov (Yakiv) Holovatsky (Russian: Яков Фёдорович Головацкий, Ukrainian: Яків Головацький; October 17, 1814 in Chepeli, Zolochiv county, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austrian Empire - May 13, 1888 in Vilno, Russian Empire) was a noted Galician historian, literary scholar, ethnographer, linguist, bibliographer, lexicographer, poet and leader of Western Ukrainian Russophiles. He was a member of political group called Ruthenian Triad.

Biography

Yakub Holovatsky httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen11cGol

Yakiv was born in a family of a priest Fedir Ivanovych Holovatsky (Hlavatsky) whose heritage takes roots in the city of Mykolaiv (today in Lviv Oblast). Ivan Holovatsky, grandfather of Yakov, was szlachtycz of Polish Prus coat of arms family and the burg-minister of Mykolaiv. Yakiv's mother Fekla Vasylivna Yakymovich also was from the family of a priest in Tur, Zloczow powiat. His education he received in Lviv where later he enrolled into the Theological Seminary of the University of Lviv. As a student he traversed Galicia, Bukovyna, and Transcarpathia collecting folk songs. In 1832, at Lviv University he, Markiyan Shashkevych, and Ivan Vahylevych formed the Ruthenian Triad, which published the first Halycz almanac in the vernacular, Rusalka Dnistrovaya (The Dniester Nymph, 1836), and played an important role in the Galician cultural revival. In 1842 he became a Greek-Catholic priest and later received an appointment to the village of Mykytyntsi near Kolomea. From 1848 to 1867 he was the first professor of Ukrainian philology at Lviv University. During that time in 1864-1866 was the rector (rector magnificus) of the university. Influenced by Mikhail Pogodin's Pan-Slavist ideas, he became a Russophile in the 1850s. Dismissed from the university for his views, in 1867 he moved to Russian-ruled Vilno to head the archeological commission there.

References

Yakub Holovatsky Wikipedia