Zoe Hauptová (February 9, 1929 – January 23, 2012) was a Czech slavicist, palaeologist, editor, translator, lecturer and editor of the Old Church Slavonic Dictionary (from 1973, its chief editor).
Zoe Hauptová | |
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Born | (1929-02-09)9 February 1929 Brno, Czechoslovakia |
Died | 23 January 2012(2012-01-23) (aged 82) Prague, Czech Republic |
Alma mater | Charles University in Prague |
Known for | Old Church Slavonic Dictionary |
Spouse | Petra Fisherová |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Linguistics, Slavic studies |
Institutions | Charles University in Prague, Jan Evangelista Purkyně University in Ústí nad Labem |
Hauptová was born in the city of Brno, and lived for a few years in Moravské Budějovice in the Vysočina Region, before moving with her mother to Prague.[1] She attended a French grammar school there, from which she graduated in 1948.[1] She then began studying Czech and Polish at the Charles University Faculty of Arts, before expanding her studies to Slavic philology in general,[1][2] and particularly Old Slavonic, under the influence of linguistics professors Bohuslav Havránek, Vladimír Skalička, Vladimír Šmilauer and others who taught in the faculty at that time.[1] She also studied at the Linguistic Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Budapest. She earned a PhD in 1951,[2] and a Candidate of Sciences in 1958.[2]
In 1952, Hauptová was appointed as a researcher in the Slavonic Linguistics Department of the Slavonic Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, and began working on the Old Church Slavonic Dictionary,[1][2] published as separate volumes, totalling more than 3,000 pages, between 1966–1997.[1] She became its chief editor in 1972.[1] She also worked on the Old Slavonic Etymological Dictionary and the Old Church Slavonic Monuments.[1][2] From 1995–2003, she was president of the Commission for Church Slavonic Dictionaries within the International Committee of Slavicists.[1]
She lectured in paleoslavic and comparative Slavonic linguistics at the Pedagogical Faculty of the Jan Evangelista Purkyně University in Ústí nad Labem, where she obtained habilitation in 1990.[1][2] She also taught at the Charles University in Prague.[1][2] Two anthologies she co-edited, The Golden Age of Bulgarian Literature and The Writing of the Russian Middle Ages, are still indispensable for students of Slavic studies.[1]
Among her research interests were general and comparative Slavonic studies; grammatical, lexicographic and textological studies of Old Church Slavonic; Slavic-Hungarian language relations, and Slavic history.[2][3]
Her partner was painter and graphic artist Petra Fisherová.[5] Hauptová sometimes worked as a lay preacher in the Czech Brethren church in Nejdek near Karlovy Vary.[1] She died in Prague.
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