Lyubomir Miletich was a leading Bulgarian linguist, ethnographer, dialectologist and historian, as well as the chairman of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences from 1926 to his death.
Background
Lyubomir Miletich was born in Štip, today in the Republic of Macedonia, to a Bulgarian family originally from Edirne (Odrin) in modern Eastern Thrace, Turkey. His great-grandfather voivode Mile had left Edirne and settled in the Austrian Banat in the early 19th century, where his grandfather Simo was born.
Career
Simo had two sons, Svetozar and Đorđe, Lyubomir"s father, who, after briefly living in Bosnia and North Africa, returned to his homeland to become a teacher in Macedonia and northwestern Bulgaria in 1859. Miletich"s mother, Evka Popdaova, was born in Veles, Macedonia. Miletich studied in Sofia and Novi Sad, but finished school in the Zagreb Secondary School for Classical Education in 1882 and graduated in Slavistics from the University of Zagreb and Charles University in Prague, where he was taught by January Gebauer.
Miletich participated in the foundation of Sofia University in 1888.
He became a Doctor of Philosophy of philology and Slavic philology of the University of Zagreb in July 1889. Miletich become the dean of the Faculty of History and Philology of University of Sofia during the 1903-1904 academic year.
During the 1900-1901 and 1921-1922, he was the rector of the University. Similarly, he was the chairman of the Bulgarian Macedonian Scientific Institute from 1927 to his death.
Miletich died in Sofia on 1 June 1937.
Miletich Point on Greenwich Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Lyubomir Miletich.
Membership
Russian Academy of Sciences. Academy of Sciences of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics. Bulgarian Academy of Sciences]
Since 1898, Miletich was a member of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, which it presided from 1926 until his death.
Miletich was a doctor honoris causa of the Kharkiv University, a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, as well of the Russian Historical Society, the Polish Academy of Learning, the South Slavic Academy of Sciences, the Czechoslovakian Academy of Sciences, the Czechoslovakian Scientific Society and the Czechoslovakian Ethnographic Society, the Hungarian Ethnographic Society and the Russian Archaeological Institute.