Alexander Mervart
Alexander Mikhailovich Mervart was born at Bruchsal/Germany, became a Russian indologist, ethnographer, linguist and the first Russian dravidologist.
Career
In 1913, Mervart was appointed head of the Indian department at the Museum of Anthropology & Ethnography. In 1914–1918, he and his wife explored much of the territory of South India and Ceylon, and visited Malaya, Singapore and Indonesia. As a result of this expedition, Mervart managed to assemble a large and unique collection of artefacts and objects of folk art from all over South and Southeast Asia. Upon his return to Leningrad, Mervart became the keeper of the Museum of Anthropology & Ethnography and a teacher at the Leningrad State University, where he would be the first one in Russia to introduce the course of the Tamil language to the curriculum. In 1926–1929, Mervart published around 20 scientific works and numerous articles.In December 1929, according to other sources, on 13 January 1930 he was arrested on trumped-up charges in the Academics' Case, accused of espionage and on 8 August 1931 sentenced to five years of imprisonment by the OGPU Collegium. Alexander Mervart was sent to the Ukhtinsko-Pechorsky Labor Camp.
He died at Utpetchlager on 23 May 1932.
Mervart, Alexander
Mervart, Alexander
Mervart, Alexander
Category:1884 births
Category:Russian people of German descent
Category:1932 deaths
Category:People from Bruchsal
Category:Russian Indologists
Category:Dravidologists
Category:Emigrants from the German Empire to the Russian Empire
Category:Writers from Mannheim
Category:20th-century linguists
Category:German people who died in Soviet detention
Category:People convicted of spying
Category:People who died in the Gulag