Generated by GPT-5-mini| Tadeusz Lehr-Spławiński | |
|---|---|
| Name | Tadeusz Lehr-Spławiński |
| Birth date | 10 March 1891 |
| Birth place | Kraków, Austro-Hungary |
| Death date | 21 November 1965 |
| Death place | Kraków, Poland |
| Occupation | Linguist, philologist, university professor |
| Alma mater | Jagiellonian University, University of Vienna |
| Notable works | "Gramatyka historyczna języka polskiego" (selected) |
Tadeusz Lehr-Spławiński was a Polish linguist and philologist noted for his scholarship in Slavic studies, historical linguistics, and Indo-European comparative research. He held professorships at Jagiellonian University and other institutions, served in academic administration, and engaged in intellectual resistance during the World War II occupation. His work influenced studies of Old Church Slavonic, Polish language, and Balkan Slavic contacts.
Born in Kraków when the city belonged to the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria within the Austro-Hungarian Empire, he grew up amid the cultural milieu linked to Jagiellonian University, Austrian administrative structures, and Polish patriotic movements such as those associated with Roman Dmowski and Józef Piłsudski's era. He pursued higher studies at Jagiellonian University and completed advanced work at the University of Vienna, interacting with scholars from the Austro-Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the Polish Academy of Learning, and networks connected to Vilnius University and Lviv University. During his formative years he encountered prominent figures in Slavic studies and Indo-European studies including contemporaries influenced by Vladimir Dahl traditions, the legacy of Franz Miklosich, and currents from Max Müller's comparative linguistics.
Lehr-Spławiński held chairs and lectured at Jagiellonian University, contributed to the Polish Academy of Sciences milieu, and collaborated with departments linked to University of Warsaw and Lviv University alumni. He produced monographs and articles addressing phonology, morphology, and historical syntax with particular attention to Old Church Slavonic, Church Slavonic liturgy, and the development of Polish language phonetics. His research engaged comparative materials from Russian Empire-era manuscript traditions, Bulgarian dialectology, Serbo-Croatian records, and Balkan linguistic isoglosses, placing him in scholarly dialogues with figures associated with Prague School, Leipzig philological circles, and the University of Vienna tradition. He supervised students who later taught at Adam Mickiewicz University and other Polish faculties, and he participated in editorial boards of periodicals linked to the Polish Academy of Learning and international congresses of Slavists.
During the World War II occupation of Poland by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, he remained in Kraków where he became involved in clandestine academic efforts associated with underground education networks tied to the Polish underground state and contacts with scholars from Warsaw and Lviv. He resisted German policies affecting universities linked to institutions like Jagiellonian University and collaborated with cultural preservation initiatives overlapping with figures associated with Władysław Sikorski's political circles and intellectuals opposing the occupation. His wartime stance placed him among academics subject to surveillance by Gestapo and in contact with communities formed around Home Army sympathizers, while he maintained correspondence with colleagues in Prague and Belgrade when possible.
Lehr-Spławiński's corpus of work includes studies on the historical grammar of Polish language, analyses of Slavic accentology, and examinations of contact phenomena in the Balkans such as links between Slavic languages and Greek language or Albanian language. He advanced philological methods related to textual criticism of Old Church Slavonic manuscripts, drawing on comparative material from Cyril and Methodius textual traditions, Byzantine sources, and ethnolinguistic data collected in regions formerly part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He contributed to debates on the classification of South Slavic dialects, engaged with research from the Prague Linguistic Circle, and responded to contemporaneous work by scholars connected to Leipzig and Berlin universities. His students and correspondents included academics who later worked at University of Wrocław, University of Poznań, and institutions across Central Europe and the Balkans.
After World War II he resumed teaching at Jagiellonian University and participated in rebuilding Polish academic life alongside entities such as the Polish Academy of Sciences and cultural institutions in Kraków and Warsaw. He received recognitions from Polish scholarly bodies and maintained influence through monographs cited by researchers at Oxford University, Harvard University, and other international centers of Slavic studies and Indo-European studies. His legacy persists in curricula at Jagiellonian University, in the historiography of Polish language studies, and in archival collections held by libraries associated with Jagiellonian Library and the Polish Academy of Learning. Prominent students and later scholars across Poland, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, and Yugoslavia acknowledged his methodological impact on philology, dialectology, and historical linguistics. Category:Polish linguists