Heinrich von Wlislocki

Heinrich von Wlislocki Heinrich Adalbert von Wlislocki (Hungarian: ''Wlislocki Henrik''; born 9 July 1856 in Kronstadt; died 19 February 1907 in Klosdorf bei Kleinkopisch, now in Șona) was a Transylvanian linguist and folklorist.

The son of an ethnically Polish Austro-Hungarian Imperial tax collector and a Transylvanian Saxon, he attended the venerable Johannes Honterus Gymnasium (school) in Kronstadt and then the recently founded University of Klausenburg (later Franz Joseph University) from 1875 to 1879. In 1879 he earned his doctorate with a dissertation on Eddic poetry, ''Hapax Legomena im Atlamál'', which was published in ''Acta Comparationis Litterarum Universarum,'' a journal edited by his academic advisors, Hugo Meltzl and Sámuel Brassai. After the death of his father, he worked in humble circumstances as a private tutor. From 1883 to 1890 he lived in Mühlbach (Sebeș).

In his specialty, Romani studies, he pursued an extensive literary collection effort and engaged in field studies with nomadic Transylvanian Gypsies. He became a member of a clan and was married for a time to a Gypsy woman named Rosa Saric, from whom he was later divorced. He developed a distinguished reputation as a researcher in this area. Charles Godfrey Leland in 1889 said Wlislocki was probably more "practically familiar" with Gypsy life and language than "any scholar who ever lived."

From 1896 to 1898 he collaborated on Hans Ferdinand Helmolt's ''History of the World''. In his last years, from 1899 to his death in 1907, he suffered from mental illness and lived under the care of his then-wife, a teacher of Hungarian named Fanny Dörfler. Dörfler was a published folkorist herself.

Wlislocki published numerous essays in periodicals, among others in the ''Ungarischen Revue'' (Hungarian Review), the ''Zeitschrift für vergleichende Literaturgeschichte'', the ''Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society'', the ''Zeitschrift für deutsche Philologie'' and the ''Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft''. He also worked as a translator, translating Sandor Petőfi into Icelandic and János Vajda and "K. Szász" (per Helmolt, probably Károly Szász, 1829–1905) into German.

In 2001, the Department of Romology of the University of Pécs established the Wlislocki Henrik Roma Student College, named after Wlislocki. Provided by Wikipedia
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