Jochem Schindler

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jochem_Schindler an entity of type: Thing

Jochem Schindler (* 8. November 1944 in Amstetten; † 24. Dezember 1994 in Prag) war ein österreichischer Indogermanist. Trotz einer relativ geringen Anzahl an Publikationen trug er wesentlich zur Entwicklung neuer Theorien in seinem Arbeitsfeld bei. Dies betraf insbesondere die indogermanische Ursprache und die Bedeutung des Ablautes im Indogermanischen. rdf:langString
Jochem "Joki" Schindler (8 November 1944 in Amstetten, Lower Austria – 24 December 1994 in Prague) was an Austrian Indo-Europeanist. In spite of his comparatively thin bibliography, he made important contributions, in particular to the theory of Proto-Indo-European nominal inflection and ablaut. Taught at University of Vienna from 1972 - 1978, as a professor at Harvard University from 1978 - 1987, then at Vienna. A meticulous scholar, he also recognized that mistakes were inevitable, and his phrase "Mut zum Irrtum" ("courage to err") became popular with his colleagues, including Calvert Watkins. With Watkins and others, he was a founding member of the “East Coast Indo-European Conference” in 1982. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jochem Schindler
rdf:langString Jochem Schindler
xsd:integer 2582029
xsd:integer 1073796638
rdf:langString Jochem Schindler (* 8. November 1944 in Amstetten; † 24. Dezember 1994 in Prag) war ein österreichischer Indogermanist. Trotz einer relativ geringen Anzahl an Publikationen trug er wesentlich zur Entwicklung neuer Theorien in seinem Arbeitsfeld bei. Dies betraf insbesondere die indogermanische Ursprache und die Bedeutung des Ablautes im Indogermanischen.
rdf:langString Jochem "Joki" Schindler (8 November 1944 in Amstetten, Lower Austria – 24 December 1994 in Prague) was an Austrian Indo-Europeanist. In spite of his comparatively thin bibliography, he made important contributions, in particular to the theory of Proto-Indo-European nominal inflection and ablaut. Taught at University of Vienna from 1972 - 1978, as a professor at Harvard University from 1978 - 1987, then at Vienna. A meticulous scholar, he also recognized that mistakes were inevitable, and his phrase "Mut zum Irrtum" ("courage to err") became popular with his colleagues, including Calvert Watkins. With Watkins and others, he was a founding member of the “East Coast Indo-European Conference” in 1982.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2783

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