Nikolai Nevsky
Nikolai Aleksandrovich Nevsky (Russian: Никола́й Алекса́ндрович Не́вский; the surname is also transcribed Nevskij; 1 March [O.S. 18 February] 1892 – 24 November 1937) was a Russian and Soviet linguist, an expert on a number of East Asian languages. He was one of the founders of the modern study of the Tangut language of the Western Xia Empire, the work for which he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science in Philology during his life, and Lenin Prize posthumously. He spent most of his research career in Japan before returning to the USSR. He was arrested and executed during the Great Purge; his surviving manuscripts were published much later, starting in 1960. Early lifeHe graduated from Rybinsk Gymnasium in 1909 with a silver medal, the second class of distinction, and entered the St Petersburg Institute of Technology. However, after a year, he transferred to the Department of Oriental Languages of the Saint Petersburg University, where he graduated in 1914. Among his teachers were Vasiliy Mikhaylovich Alekseyev and Aleksei Ivanovich Ivanov. In JapanIn 1915, Nevsky was sent to Japan for two years, but the Russian Revolutions and the Russian Civil War made him remain there for fourteen years. In Japan, he travelled around the country, studying the Ainu language and the Ainu people as well as the Miyako language of the Miyako Islands and the Tsou language of the Tsou people of Taiwan (then part of the Japanese Empire). He published research articles in Japanese journals. He started learning Miyako from a student named Ueunten Kenpu, who entered Tokyo Higher Normal School in 1919. He visited the Miyako Islands in 1922, 1926 and 1928. He invented a Cyrillization of Miyako; recorded Miyako's epic songs, called āgu and left an unpublished Miyako lexicon.[1] In 1925, Nevsky began to decipher manuscripts in Tangut that had been discovered in 1909 in Khara-Khoto by Pyotr Kozlov. While in Japan he married Iso (Isoko) Mantani-Nevsky (Исо (Исоко) Мантани-Невская, 萬谷イソ, 萬谷磯子, 1901–1937), with whom he had a daughter, Yelena (1928–2017). Return to RussiaPersuaded by Soviet scholars and officials, Nevsky returned to Leningrad, renamed from St. Petersburg, in the autumn of 1929, leaving his wife and young daughter in Japan. He worked at the Leningrad State University, the Leningrad Institute of Philosophy, Literature and History; Институт философии, литературы и истории, the Institute of Oriental Studies (then based in Leningrad) and the Hermitage Museum. His wife and daughter joined him in Leningrad in 1933. In January 1935 he was awarded a Doctor of Science degree based on the sum of his work without submitting a thesis. Arrest and deathIn the night of 3–4 October 1937 he was arrested by the NKVD on the charge of being a Japanese spy.[2] On 24 November 1937, he was executed, along with his wife. Their daughter, Yelena, was initially looked after by N. I. Konrad, but in 1941 was adopted by a distant relative of Nevsky, Viktor Leontyevich Afrosimov. LegacyHe was rehabilitated in 1957. He was posthumously awarded, in 1962, the Lenin Prize for the book "Tangut Philology". It was published in 1960 and was based on some of his surviving materials on the Tangut language. His other surviving manuscripts continued to be published, but many of his materials seem to be irretrievably lost. Works
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