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Stefan Ramułt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Polish scholar, linguist
Stefan Ramułt in 1913

Stefan Ramułt (22 December 1859 – 24 December 1913) was a Polish scholar who specialized in the language and culture of theKashubians.

In the winter of 1873-1874, Ramułt fell into a pond, causing a long-term illness and ailments which lasted for the rest of his life. During his convalescence he readFlorian Ceynowa's work on theKashubian language and culture. This led to his interest in the topic, initially via independent research into the language and culture of the Kashubians. From 1871 to 1879 he studied at the gymnasium in Wadowice; from 1879 to 1883, he studied linguistics at the Faculty of Philosophy at theUniversity of Lviv.

A Kashubian by choice if not by birth, Ramułt wrote theDictionary of the Pomeranian or Kashubian language (Słownik języka pomorskiego, czyli kaszubskiego, Kraków 1893). It documented the Kashubian language not as a mere dialect of Polish, asAleksander Brückner andHieronim Derdowski had seen it, but as a distinctSlavic language, identifying the Kashubians as the only remnant of a Pomeranian people who had settled on the southern Baltic coast, separate from otherSlavs.[1] In his second great work, "Statistics of the Kashubian Population" (Statystyka ludności kaszubskiej, Kraków 1899), he traced the settlement and lives of Kashubians all around the world, includingWinona, Minnesota, which he called the "Kashubian Capital of America."[2] His total number of Kashubians in Europe was 200,217 with 130,700 living in the Americas for a total of 330,917 Kashubians around the world.[3]

Ramułt was also a co-founder of the Lviv Folk Society and a member of the PAU Language Committee. He dreamed of settling in Kashubia, but due to his illness, his doctors advised against this. Toward the end of his life he moved fromLviv toKraków, where his son Mirosław was a professor at theJagiellonian University and where he worked in a room he called "Kashubia". He died there in 1913. His tombstone in Kraków'sRakowicki Cemetery bears the inscription: "Stefan Ramułt, Kashubian-Pomeranian explorer."[4]

References

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  1. ^Gogolewski, Stanisław (2001).Koerner, E.F.K; Szwedek, Aleksander (eds.).Dialectology in Poland, 1873-1997. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. p. 129.ISBN 9789027245915.
  2. ^"Kashubian Capital of America – Bambenek.org".bambenek.org. Retrieved2017-07-24.
  3. ^Ramułt, Stefan (1899).Statystyka ludności kaszubskiej. Krakow. p. 243.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^"artykuly-Ramułt Stefan 1859-1913 : Nasze Kaszuby".naszekaszuby.pl (in Polish). Retrieved2017-07-24.
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