Dorovsky, Ivan

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Dorovsky, Ivan
Name (Cyrilic)
Доровски, Иван
Other forms of name
Dorovski, Ivan
Dorovskii, Ivan
Доровский, Иван
Date of birth
1935-05-18
Place of birth
Archangelos (Kastoria Nome, Greece)
Place of residence/headquarters
Brno (Czech Republic)
Associate group
Masarykova univerzita v Brně. Ústav slavistiky
Occupation
Slavists
College teachers
Associated Language
cze mac rus
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 54167812
Wikidata: Q3408717
Library of congress: n 81028239
Sources of Information
  • His Bibliografie ceskoslovenske balkanistiky ... 1973.
  • His Raiko Zhinzifov, 1988:t.p. (Ivan Dorovskii)
  • Nar. knihovna CR auth. file, Oct. 20, 2004(Dorovsky, Ivan; b. May 18, 1935 in Greece; PhDr., CSc.; professor of Balkan studies)
  • Češko-makedonski kniževni temi, 2011:t.p. (Иван Доровски), p. 25 (Иван Доровски = Ivan Dorovský), p. 5 ("born on May 18, 1935 in Čuka, Aegean Macedonia. His entire creative life is connected with former Czechoslovakia, today the Czech Republic, specifically with Moravia and Brno.")
  • Ivan Dorovský, 2000:page 3 and following (Ivan Dorovský; Balkanologist, Slavist, and comparatist; born in the village of Čuka in Greece on 18 May 1935; came to Czechoslovakia as a thirteen-year old; currently profesor in the Ústav slavistiky in the filozofická fakulta of the Masarykova univerzita v Brně; scholarly works in Czech, Macedonian, and Russian)
Wikipedia description:

Ivan Dorovský (18 May 1935 – 24 August 2021) was a Czech Balkanologist of Macedonian origin. He worked as a literary scholar, translator, poet and publicist, university professor at Masaryk University, and Slavist. He was also the Chairman of the Society of Friends of the South Slavs. He was the 2008 recipient of the Macedonian honorary Racin Recognition for his contribution and affirmation of Macedonian literature and culture, and the 2013 recipient of the F. A. Zach Prize for his contribution to the relationship with the Serbian nation. He left Greece as a child during the civil war.

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