Global Information Lookup Global Information

Radu Sbiera information


Radu I. Sbiera (December 17, 1876–April 6, 1946) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian linguist and politician.

Born in Cernăuți, in the Duchy of Bukovina, he was the son of Ion G. Sbiera. After attending the state gymnasium and the normal school in his native city, he studied at the literature and philosophy faculty of Czernowitz University from 1894 to 1898. He received a degree in Latin, Greek, and Romanian, with a specialty in Classics and philosophy. He was a founding member of Societatea Academică Junimea. His 1903 PhD thesis dealt with Romance grammar. Until 1919, he taught Latin and Greek at the normal school and at a state high school in Cernăuți.[1]

Sbiera joined the Romanian National Party in 1905. In October 1918, he joined the Romanian National Council as well as its executive committee. In November, he was secretary of the congress that voted for the union of Bukovina with Romania, and formed part of the delegation that presented the resolution to King Ferdinand I. From December 1918 until April 1919, he was education minister in the provincial government elected by the council. From 1919 to 1940, he taught at the department of Indo-European philology of Cernăuți University, and was dean in 1922–1923. From 1940, he taught in the Latin language and literature department of the University of Bucharest.[1]

Sbiera served in the Assembly of Deputies and in 1926–1927 was mayor of Cernăuți. He wrote on Romanian and Classical philology, the history of education and culture in Bukovina. A poet and journalist, his contributions appeared in literary magazines and specialty publications: Apărarea națională, Convorbiri Literare, Codrul Cosminului, Deșteptarea, Gazeta Bucovinei, Familia, Junimea literară, Patria, and Revista filologică. From 1921 to 1924, he headed the Society for Romanian Culture and Literature in Bukovina. He died in Caracal.[1]

  1. ^ a b c Satco and Niculică, pp. 356-57

and 9 Related for: Radu Sbiera information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8823 seconds.)

Radu Sbiera

Last Update:

Radu I. Sbiera (December 17, 1876–April 6, 1946) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian linguist and politician. Born in Cernăuți, in the Duchy of Bukovina...

Word Count : 329

Sbiera

Last Update:

Sbiera is a Romanian male surname. Notable people with the surname include: Ion G. Sbiera (1835–1916), Romanian folklorist Radu Sbiera (1876–1946), Romanian...

Word Count : 68

General Congress of Bukovina

Last Update:

Vladimir de Repta, Dionisie Bejan, Ion Nistor, Octavian Gheorghian, Radu Sbiera, Vasile Bodnarescu, Gheorghe Şandru, Vasile Marcu, Dimitrie Bucevschi...

Word Count : 353

List of mayors of Chernivtsi

Last Update:

Gheorghe Șandru, 1920-1922 Nicu Flondor, 1922-1926 Barbu Grigorovici, 1926 Radu Sbiera, 1926-1927 Romulus Cândea, 1927-1929 Dimitrie Marmeluc, 1933-1938 Nicu...

Word Count : 340

Flag and coat of arms of Transylvania

Last Update:

13–15 Sbiera, p. 219; Pál, p. 114; Teșculă & Gavrilă, pp. 204–205 Păcățian, p. 1; Pălănceanu, pp. 139–142 Pál, p. 113 Pălănceanu, p. 139; Sbiera, p. 219...

Word Count : 14825

Romanian Academy

Last Update:

Țara Românească 49 years, 303 days 8 April 1885 19 years, 7 days 22 Ion G. Sbiera 1 November 1835 Bucovina 30 years, 151 days 22 October 1916 50 years, 204 days...

Word Count : 268

Chernivtsi

Last Update:

Rotaru (born 1947), Romanian-Ukrainian pop singer Wojciech Rubinowicz Ion G. Sbiera (1836–1916), Romanian folklorist and historian Joseph Schmidt (1904–1942)...

Word Count : 9631

Suceava

Last Update:

Urban Culture and Landscape in Suceava. Biblioteca Bucovinei I.G. Sbiera (I.G. Sbiera Bukovina Library) is the first public library in Suceava, inaugurated...

Word Count : 11646

List of members of the Romanian Academy

Last Update:

member 1963 Traian Săvulescu 1889–1963 botanist titular member 1936 Ion G. Sbiera 1836–1916 folklorist, literary historian founding member 1866 Horia Scutaru-Ungureanu...

Word Count : 33

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net