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Soviet archeologist (1906-1984) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anatoly Leopoldovich Yakobson (Russian: Анатолий Леопольдович Якобсон; born 22 August 1906) was a Soviet archaeologist, historian of art and architecture.[1][2][3]
Anatoly Yakobson | |
---|---|
Анатолий Леопольдович Якобсон | |
Born | |
Died | August 3, 1984 77) | (aged
Citizenship | Russian Empire Soviet Union |
Alma mater | Saint Petersburg State University |
Scientific career | |
Academic advisors | Nikolai Marr |
Notable students | Alexander Aibabin |
He was a Doctor of Historical Sciences (1961) and member of the Institute of Archeology of the USSR Academy of Sciences.[3]
Anatoly Yakobson was born in the family of a forester.[4] In 1922 he entered the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of Moscow University, two years later he transferred to the archaeological department of the Faculty of Ethnology.[3] In 1927, Yakobson moved to live in Leningrad, where he studied at the Faculty of Linguistics and the History of Material Culture of Leningrad University. In 1929 he graduated from Leningrad University.
In 1941 he defended his Ph.D. thesis on the topic "Architecture of medieval Chersonese".[5]
Since 1930, he worked in Leningrad, at the State Academy of the History of Material Culture, which in 1937 became part of the USSR Academy of Sciences as the Institute of the History of Material Culture named after Nikolai Marr.[3] In 1943, the institute was transferred to Moscow, and its branch remained in Leningrad.[3]
Anatoly Yakobson endured the Siege of Leningrad. After being evacuated to Ivanovo, he moved to Moscow and was hired by the Moscow branch of the Institute of the History of Material Culture.
In 1945, he transferred to the Leningrad branch of the same institute, where he worked until the end of his life.[5]
His research interests are: Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages, the Northern Black Sea region and Transcaucasia.[3] He carried out large-scale excavations in the Crimea (Tauric Chersonesus, etc.).
He is the author of more than 60 scientific works, including "Essays on the history of Armenian architecture in the 5th-17th centuries" (1950).
Anatoly Yakobson took part in archaeological expeditions in Old Crimea, Sudak, Chersonese.
In 1936, he participated in the excavations of Amberd Castle in Armenia.
In the 1930s he took part in the work of the Tsimlyansk expedition.
Yakobson participated in an expedition to the Mangup settlement led by E.V. Weimarn, M.A. Tikhanova and A.L. Jacobson.
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