Sergei Yakhontov Explained

Sergey E. Yakhontov (Russian: Серге́й Евге́ньевич Я́хонтов, Sergej Jevgen'evič Jachontov; December 13, 1926 in Leningrad – 28 January 2018) was a Russian linguist, an expert in Chinese, comparative, and general linguistics. He was the son of astronomer Nataliya Sergeevna Samoilova-Yakhontova. In 1950 he was graduated from the Oriental Faculty of Leningrad State University. In 1962–1963 he underwent training in Beijing and visited Nanyang University (Singapore) from 1971 to 1972. He taught at the Oriental Faculty of St. Petersburg State University.[1]

Yakhontov studied under Alexander Dragunov and developed on many ideas of his teacher, creating the Leningrad (St. Petersburg) school of Sino-Tibetan linguistics. He published dozens of articles, many translated into English, Chinese, and Japanese. In particular, he made major contributions to Old Chinese phonology, proposing the *l medial (now commonly treated as *r) and a rounded vowel *o, which led to the six vowel system that is now accepted by most researchers.[2] [3]

Works

Notes and References

  1. http://www.spbu.ru/faces/medal/orient/yahontov/ Яхонтов Сергей Евгеньевич
  2. Book: Baxter, William H. . William H. Baxter

    . A Handbook of Old Chinese Phonology . William H. Baxter . Berlin . Mouton de Gruyter . 1992 . 978-3-11-012324-1 . 23, 178, 180, 250, 262.

  3. Sergei Evgenyevich Yakhontov (1926–2018) . Alain . Peyraube . Journal of Chinese Linguistics . 40 . 1 . 2019 . 315–320 . 10.1353/jcl.2019.0013. 171852893 .