Aharon Dolgopolsky
Aharon Dolgopolsky (Hebrew: אהרון דולגופולסקי, Russian: Арон Борисович Долгопольский; 18 November 1930 – 20 July 2012[1]) was a Russian-Israeli linguist and one of the modern founders of comparative Nostratic linguistics.[2][3]
Born in Moscow, he arrived at the long-forgotten Nostratic hypothesis in the 1960s, at around the same time but independently of Vladislav Illich-Svitych. Together with Illich-Svitych, he was the first to undertake a multilateral comparison of the supposed daughter languages of Nostratic. Teaching Nostratics at Moscow University for 8 years, Dolgopolsky moved to Israel in 1976, and taught at the University of Haifa.
Dolgopolsky was featured in the NOVA documentary, In search of the first language.
He died on 20 July 2012 in Haifa.
References
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External links
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- Pages with reference errors
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- 1930 births
- 2012 deaths
- People from Moscow
- Russian emigrants to Israel
- Russian Jews
- Israeli linguists
- Linguists from Russia
- Soviet linguists
- Jewish scientists
- Israeli people of Russian-Jewish descent
- Paleolinguists
- Articles with dead external links from February 2014