Kallista Kann Explained

Kallista Kann
Birth Date:February 28, 1895
Birth Place:Dorpat, Governorate of Livonia, Russian Empire
Death Place:Tallinn, Estonia
Nationality:Estonian
Occupation:Linguist

Hermine Kallista Kann (February 28, 1895 – March 23, 1983) was an Estonian linguist and teacher.[1]

Early life and education

Kallista Kann was born in Tartu in the Governorate of Livonia, Russian Empire, the daughter of the schoolteacher Hans Kann (1849–1932) and Liisa Kann (née Pettai, 1856–1936). She was the sister of the music teacher Salme Kann. In 1913, she graduated from Tartu Pushkin High School for Girls, and she attended the university program for women in Kharkiv from 1916 to 1918.

From 1927 to 1932, she studied at the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Tartu, graduating cum laude in 1932. From 1935 to 1936, she studied in Paris as a fellow of the French Research Institute of Tartu (Estonian: Tartu Prantsuse Teaduslik Instituut, French: l'Institut scientifique français de Tartu).[2] In 1937, she defended her master's thesis La Place de l'Adjectif dans 'Erec et Enide' et 'Cligés' par Chrétien de Troyes (The Position of the Adjective in Érec et Énide and Cligès by Chrétien de Troyes)[3] [4] at the University of Tartu and received a master's degree (recognized in 1946 as a doctoral degree in philology).

Career

From 1914 to 1925, Kann taught foreign languages in Ukraine and Georgia. From 1927 to 1935, during her university studies, she was the secretary of the French Research Institute of Tartu.[5] [6] From 1936 to 1944, she taught German and French at the Tallinn French School. From 1944 to 1945, she was the principal of Secondary School No. 4 in Tallinn (since 2006, Tallinn Kristiine High School).[7]

From 1945 to 1949, she was a senior lecturer in the Department of Philology of Western European Nations (renamed the Department of Western European Languages in 1947) at Tartu State University. In 1949 she was named an associate professor, and she then taught the Department of Western European Languages from 1950 to 1952; in 1953 this was merged into the Department of Foreign Languages,[8] where she taught from 1953 to 1961. From 1961 to 1963 she was head of the German Language Department, and from 1963 to 1966 an associate professor in the Department of German. She retired in 1966.

Her students included the poet and philosopher Jaan Kaplinski, the translator, the translator and editor, the translator, the translator and literary scholar, and the linguist and translator .

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Mutt . Oleg . Oleg Mutt . Eminent Estonian Specialist in Romance Philology . Советское финно-угроведение . 1965 . 1 . 2 . 150-151.
  2. Book: Rutiku . Siret . Kegelmann . René . Germanistik in Tartu/Dorpat: Rückblick auf 200 Jahre . 2003 . University of Tartu . Tartu . 60.
  3. Book: Tartu Riiklik Ülikool . Tartu Riikliku Ülikooli õppeteaduskoosseisu biobibliograafianimestik 1944–1980 . 1987 . Valgus . Tallinn . 214.
  4. Web site: Hermine Kallista . Album Academicum Universitatis Tartuensis 1918-1944 . Rahvusarhiiv . November 24, 2023 . Tartu.
  5. Viiret . Veronika . Romaani filoloogi meenutusi . Akadeemia . 1989 . 1 . 8 . 1706 . 0235-7771.
  6. Web site: Varik . Akso . L’Institut scientifique français de Tartu de 1922 à 1941 . France-Estonie . l’Association France-Estonie . November 24, 2023 . Paris.
  7. Web site: School History . Tallinna Kristiine Gümnaasium . Tallinna Kristiine Gümnaasium . November 24, 2023 . Tallinn.
  8. Book: Siilivask . Karl . History of Tartu University, 1632–1982 . 1985 . Perioodika . Tallinn . 255.