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Jakob Hurt

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Hurt, Jakob

 

Born July 10 (22), 1839, in the Vana-Koiola volost (small rural district), now Pôlva Raion; died Dec. 31, 1906 (Jan. 13, 1907), in St. Petersburg. Estonian folklorist, linguist, and public figure.

Hurt graduated from the University of Tartu. In 1886 he defended his doctoral dissertation in linguistics in Helsinki. From 1872 to 1901 he was a minister. A leader of the Estonian national movement, Hurt was a member of its bourgeois-clerical moderate wing. He did research on the Estonian language and worked on its standardization. As a collector and publisher of Estonian folklore, Hurt established an extensive network of approximately 1,400 correspondents from whom he obtained recordings. He planned a fundamental edition of folklore works, part of which was published—namely, the collections of folk songs Starinnye gusli (vol. 1, parts 1–3, 1875–86; vol. 2, parts 1–2, 1884–86) and Pesnisetu (vols. 1–3, 1904–07).

REFERENCE

“Otzyv prof. K. Krona o trudakh pastora d-ra Gurt.” In Otchet Rus. geografich. ob-va za 1904 g. St. Petersburg, 1905.

H. NIIT

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive
Wiedemann highlights the contribution of Jakob Hurt in connection with Voru grammar.
Jakob Hurt, Estonian clergyman and folklore collector from the 19th century, saw the mission of small Estonia in enhancing the minds of its people.
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