Education
Humboldt University of Berlin.
anthropologist explorer linguist
Humboldt University of Berlin.
Working as a schoolteacher in Barnaul, Radlov became interested in the native peoples of Siberia and published his ethnographic findings in the influential monograph From Siberia (1884). From 1866 to 1907, he translated and released a number of monuments of Turkic folklore. Most importantly, he was the first to publish the Orhon inscriptions.
Four volumes of his comparative dictionary of Turkic languages followed in to 1911.
Radlov helped establish the Russian Museum of Ethnography and was in charge of the Asiatic Museum in Saint St. Petersburg from 1884 to 1894. Radlov assisted Grigory Potanin on his glossary of Salar language, Western Yugur language, and Eastern Yugur language in Potanin"s Russian language book The Tangut-Tibetan Borderlands of China and Central Mongolia.
During the Stalinist repressions of the late 1930s, the People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs and state science apparatus accused the late (ethnically German) Radloff of Panturkism. A perceived connection with the long-dead Radloff was treated as incriminating evidence against Orientalists and Turkologists, some of whom - including Alexander Samoylovich, in 1938 - were executed.
; translations XV. Lose Blätter aus meinem Tagebuche () I. World War II
Russian Academy of Sciences. Russian Academy of Sciences.