Erika Taube


Erika Taube was a German ethnologist and folklorist specialized in the study of Central Asian cultures, particularly those of Turkic and Mongolian peoples. Her work focused on the diverse forms of oral tradition in Central Asia from an ethnological perspective, with a focus on comparative fairy tale research.

Career

Taube studied Sinology and Tibetology at the University of Leipzig from 1952 to 1957, also spending time in Beijing in 1957/58. She then became a research assistant at the Leipzig East Asian Institute. In 1964, she received her doctorate with a dissertation on Mongolian fairy tale material. From 1992, together with her husband, Prof. Manfred Taube, she was instrumental in ensuring that Central Asian Studies at the University of Leipzig could once again be part of the canon of subjects in the newly founded Institute for Indology and Central Asian Studies. She retired in 1998. Taube passed away on in 2020 at the age of 86.

Research and contributions

Erika Taube's research centered on the collection, documentation, and analysis of ethnographic and folkloric materials from Central Asia. A significant part of her work involved fieldwork among the Tuvans, a Turkic people living in southern Mongolia. She documented their narratives and customs, making them accessible to a wider audience.
Her key contributions include:
Taube donated her fieldwork materials and recordings to Tuvan academics at the Tuvan State University in Kyzyl.

Selected publications

Articles

*

Books

*

Chapters

*

Awards

In 1996, Erika Taube's scientific work was honored with the Friedrich Weller Prize of the Saxon Academy of Sciences and Humanities.