Estonian diplomat, linguist and folklorist (1868–1946)
For the Estonian artist, see Oskar Kallis.
Oskar Kallas (also Oskar Philipp Kallas;[1] 25 October [O.S. 13 October] 1868 in Kirikuküla, Saaremaa – 26 January 1946 in Stockholm)[citation needed] was an Estonian diplomat, linguist and folklorist.[2] He was the husband of the Finnish writer Aino Kallas.
^"Juhatus ja liikmed". Riigikogu (in Estonian). Retrieved 27 February 2021.
^Toivo Miljan, Historical Dictionary of Estonia, Scarecrow Press 2004
OskarKallas (also Oskar Philipp Kallas; 25 October [O.S. 13 October] 1868 in Kirikuküla, Saaremaa – 26 January 1946 in Stockholm)[citation needed] was...
politician Madis Kallas (born 1981), Estonian decathlete Olimar Kallas [et] (1929–2006), Estonian caricaturist and graphical artist OskarKallas (1868–1946)...
with a population of around 300. It has a museum dedicated to OskarKallas and Aino Kallas. The philosopher and pedagogue Ülo Kaevats (1947–2015) was born...
two, but it was still spoken in the 1930s. Kraasna was documented by OskarKallas (along with Ludza). The linguistic enclave was south of the Russian city...
Party. He was a member of the assembly since 22 May 1919. He replaced OskarKallas. "Juhatus ja liikmed". Riigikogu (in Estonian). Retrieved 26 February...
one of the main representatives of the Estonian national romanticism. Kallas studied in 1907 and 1913 to 1916 in the studio of the artist Ants Laikmaa...
low levels of musical literacy. Another push, under the guidance of OskarKallas and including students from both the University of Tartu and the Saint...
folklore collection in the 1880s resulting a collection of 90,000 pages. OskarKallas, Ph.D (1868–1946) studied at the University of Helsinki and was the first...
English spelling. In 1922, in response to a letter by Estonian diplomat OskarKallas raising the issue, the Royal Geographical Society agreed that the correct...
London: John C. Nimmo. 1895. pp. 9–12. Kallas, Oskar. Kaheksakümmend Lutsi maarahva muinasjuttu, kogunud OskarKallas. Jurjevis (Tartus) Schmakenburg'i trükikojas...
daughter Aino married the Estonian nationalist OskarKallas and was known as a writer by the name Aino Kallas. His daughter Helmi Krohn, also an author, married...
(d. 1937) 1868 – Dan Burke, American baseball player (d. 1933) 1868 – OskarKallas, Estonian linguist and diplomat (d. 1946) 1874 – Emma Gramatica, Italian...
Romania, Hungary and Greece 1923–1931 to Finland 1925–1927 to Hungary OskarKallas (1868–1946) 1920–1922 to Finland 1922–1934 to United Kingdom and Netherlands...
official language and lingua franca.[clarification needed] According to OskarKallas, who made a studying trip to area in 1893, there were 4,387 Ludza Estonians...
(1990), "Hackman, Walter Oskar", Enzyklopädie des Märchens (in German), vol. 6, col. 350–351 Kai Laitinen (1973), Aino Kallas 1897–1921 (in German), Helsinki:...
folk dance and though she initially turned down an offer to work with OskarKallas, one of the directors of the Estonian National Museum, in 1913, Raudkats...
their origins, one of the stories is about fleeing from Sweden. In 1893 OskarKallas found Ludzi speakers in 53 villages around Mērdzene, Pilda, Nirza and...
Priimägi August Jürman (or Jürmann/Jürima) EMRL Tõnis Kalbus ETE Oskar Philipp Kallas ER Left office 21.05.1919; replaced by Aleksander Schipai Nikolai...
Johannes Aavik (1880–1973), philologist Paul Ariste (1905–1990), linguist OskarKallas (1868–1946), linguist, folklorist and diplomat Elmar Muuk (1901–1941)...
of the Estonian Literary Museum http://kivike.kirmus.ee/). Moreover, OskarKallas (1868–1946) also played an important role in collecting Estonian folklore...
pinyin: biē), softshell turtles Amadeus de Bie (1844–1920), Belgian abbot Oskar Bie (1864–1938), German art historian Bie Tingfang (1883–1940), Chinese...