Stefan Mladenov (15 December 1880 – 1 May 1963) was a Bulgarian linguist and dialectologist, a specialist in Indo-European linguistics, Slavic studies, Balkan studies, Bulgarian studies and a scientist of world renown and authority.

Stefan Mladenov
Born
Stefan Mladenov Stoyanov

(1880-12-15)15 December 1880
Vidin, Bulgaria
Died1 May 1963(1963-05-01) (aged 82)
Sofia, Bulgaria
Resting placeCentral Sofia Cemetery
42°42′50.0″N 23°20′00.5″E / 42.713889°N 23.333472°E / 42.713889; 23.333472
NationalityBulgarian
Other namesСтефан Младенов Стоянов
Occupationlinguist
Known forBulgarian studies
Notable workIntroduction to General Linguistics

Career edit

He was the first translator of Henrik Ibsen into Bulgarian. Corresponding Member of a number of Academies of Sciences, including the Russian Academy of Sciences (the only Bulgarian scientist during the Soviet period until the end of World War II); The German Academy of Sciences; Polish Academy of Sciences and more, including King's College London.

He led the Bulgarian delegation to the First Linguistic Congress in Prague in 1935. In 1929, his "History of the Bulgarian language" was published in German under the review of Max Vasmer. Previously edited the special part in the second and third volume of the first three-volume story in Bulgarian by Benyo Tsonev. His writings are fundamental to historical comparativism, because Old Bulgarian is the fourth classical and medieval literary language (see trilingual heresy).

Stefan Mladenov made a special contribution to clarifying the historical influence of the Bulgarian language and to the emergence of languages from the Balkan Linguistic Union. According to Mladenov, the South Slavic speeches within this union are Bulgarian.[1]

Publications edit

Stefan Mladenov has over 1100 scientific publications. More than 140 reviews and reviews from around the world have been published for his work. In the 20th century and in the run up to the discovery of the Internet, it was one of the largest facilities in comparative linguistics and historical linguistics in the world.

Sources edit

  1. ^ http://www.libsu.uni-sofia.bg/slavica/Mladenov.html Bibliotheca Slavica; Stefan Mladenov (15.12.1880-01.05.1963)