Leo Wiener
Leo Wiener (1862–1939) was an American historian, linguist, author and translator.
Biography
Wiener was born in Bialystok (then in the Russian Empire), of Polish-Jewish origin.[1] His father was Zalmen (Solomon) Wiener,[2][3] and his mother was Frejda Rabinowicz. He studied at the University of Warsaw in 1880, and then at the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin.[4] Wiener later declared, "Having 'for many years been a member of the Unitarian Church,' and having 'preached absolute amalgamation with the Gentile surroundings', [I] 'never allied with the Jewish Church or with Jews as such."[1]
Wiener left Europe with the plan of founding a vegetarian commune in British Honduras (now Belize). He sailed steerage to New Orleans. On his arrival, in 1880, he had no money.[5] After travel and work around the US, he went to Kansas City, Missouri, and started working as a teacher.[6] He was a polyglot, and was reputed to speak thirty languages well.[7]
Beginning in 1896, Wiener lectured on Slavic cultures at Harvard University and became the first American professor of Slavic literature. He translated 24 volumes of Leo Tolstoy's works into English,[8] a task which he completed in 24 months.[9] He taught George Rapall Noyes.
Major works
- French Words in Wolfram Von Eschenbach. 1893.
- Popular poetry of the Russian Jews. 1898.
- The history of Yiddish literature in the nineteenth century. 1899.
- The Ferrara Bible. 1900.
- Anthology of Russian Literature from the Earliest Period to the Present Time. 1902–1903.
- Gypsies as fortune-tellers and as blacksmiths. 1909.
- Philological fallacies: one in romance, another in Germanic. 1914.
- Commentary to the Germanic laws and mediaeval documents. 1915.
- An Interpretation of the Russian People. 1915.
- (translator) of Josef Svatopluk Machar's (1916). Magdalen.
- Contributions Toward a History of Arabico-Gothic Culture. 1917–1921.
- Africa and the discovery of America. 1922. Vols. I-III.
- The contemporary drama of Russia. 1924.
- The philological history of "tobacco" in America. 1925.
- Mayan and Mexican origins. 1926.
Family
In 1893 Wiener married Bertha Kahn. The mathematician Norbert Wiener was their son.[10]
References
- http://americanjewisharchives.org/publications/journal/PDF/1962_14_01_00_levitas.pdf | Reform Jews and Zionism 1919-1921
- Klingenstein, Susanne (1991). "A Philologist: The Adventures of Leo Wiener (1862–1939)" (pp. 8-17), in her Jews in the American Academy, 1900-1940: The Dynamics of Intellectual Assimilation. New Haven: Yale University Press. Accessed via JSTOR, February 8, 2020.
- "Bialystok Birth Records".
- Liptzin, Sol (2007). "Wiener, Leo." Encyclopaedia Judaica. 2nd ed. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA. Vol. 21, pp. 47-48. Retrieved via Gale Virtual Reference Library, August 4, 2018. Also available online via Encyclopedia.com.
- Klingenstein, Susanne (1998). Jews in the American Academy, 1900–1940: The Dynamics of Intellectual Assimilation. Syracuse University Press. p. 9. ISBN 9780815605416.
- Conway, Siegelman (2005). Dark Hero of the Information Age. Basic Books. Retrieved November 10, 2010.
- Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures, 2018 The President and Fellows of Harvard College.
- Tolstoy, Lev N. (1904). The Complete Works of Count Tolstoy (Translated from the Original Russian and edited by Leo Wiener). I. Boston: Dana Estes & Company. pp. iii–iv. Retrieved July 12, 2017 – via Internet Archive.
- Norbert Wiener, Ex-Prodigy: My Childhood and Youth, Cambridge, Massachusetts: The M.I.T. Press, 1953, p. 85.
- Wiener, Norbert; Jerison, David; Singer, Isadore Manuel; Stroock, Daniel W. (1997). The Legacy of Norbert Wiener: A Centennial Symposium: A Centennial Symposium in Honor of the 100th Anniversary of Norbert Wiener's Birth, October 8-14, 1994, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts. American Mathematical Soc. p. 4. ISBN 9780821804155.
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Leo Wiener |
- Works by Leo Wiener at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Leo Wiener at Internet Archive
- Works by Leo Wiener at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Works by Leo Wiener at The Online Books Page