Alexander Anton von Zagareli (also Cagareli or Tsagareli, Georgian: ალექსანდრე ანტონის ძე ცაგარელი; 9 December 1844 – 12 November 1929[1]) was a Georgian linguist. He was professor at Saint Petersburg State University an co-founder of Tbilisi State University.
Zagareli was born in Kaspi, Georgia. He studied at the University of Tübingen, Vienna, Munich, and Saint Petersburg. In 1869 he became a member of Landsmannschaft Schottland. Zagareli habilitated at age 27 at the Saint Petersburg State University. There he became a docent for Georgian Literature and later professor for Oriental Languages. Nicholas Marr was one of his most famous students. Zagareli remained at the Georgian language department at Saint Petersburg for over half a century, until his return to Georgia in 1922. The nearly 80-year-old Zagareli left Russia to take up academic positions at Tbilisi State University.
He died in Tbilisi and was interred at the Mtatsminda Pantheon.
Honours
edit- Order of St. Stanislaus, 1st class
References
edit- ^ Барамидзе А. Г. Цагарели Ал. // Краткая литературная энциклопедия / Гл. ред. А. А. Сурков. — М.: Сов. энцикл., 1962—1978. — Т. 8: Флобер — Яшпал. — 1975. — Стб. 365. (in Russian)
- Ehlich, Konrad: Bibliography on Writing and Written Language. Vol. 1, De Gruyter, 1996.
- Tuite, Kevin: (2008): "The Rise and Fall and Revival of the Ibero-Caucasian Hypothesis", Historiographia Linguistica Vol. 35, No. 1-2.