Teodor Shteingel

Teodor Shteingel (Russian: Фёдор Рудольфович Штейнгель, German: Theodor von Steinheil, 9 December 1870, Saint Petersburg – 11 April 1946 Dresden) was a Ukrainian archaeologist and nationalist politician.

Teodor Shteingel, early twentieth century
signature in Cyrillic, cursive
Ambassadors of Turkey (Rifat Pasha) and Ukraine (Teodor Shteingel) at the funeral of Hermann von Eichhorn

After graduating from Kyiv University, he was active in Horodok, Rivne Oblast establishing various public bodies including a museum in 1902 where he deposited his archeological, historical, and ethnographic collections.[1]

In 1906 he was elected as deputy for Kiev to the First State Duma where he joined the Ukrainian caucus.. He became a member of the Society of Ukrainian Progressionists and vice-president of the Ukrainian Scientific Society. Following the February Revolution of 1917 he chaired the executive committee of the Kyiv City Duma, the forerunner of the Central Rada. In 1918 was sent as a diplomatic envoy to Berlin by the Ukrainian Hetmanate. He subsequently returned to Western Ukraine in the twenties but left for Germany in 1939.[1]

Shteingel's palace, Horodok

Shteingel's palace, Horodok

Shteingel's palace is preserved as a cultural heritage site.

gollark: Blocked in potatOS I mean.
gollark: It's a browser which is blocked.
gollark: On my long-term todo list is P2P skynet, which would mean you could host your own skynet server and have it peer with existing ones and share messages, to increase reliability.
gollark: It's been explicitly designed to give the skynet server's admin no abilities not available to its users, outside of obvious ones like blocking/modifying certain data as it goes across it.
gollark: Yes, as with modems.

References

  1. "Shteingel, Teodor". Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies. Retrieved 8 February 2016.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.