Mykola Sumtsov
Mykola Fedorovych Sumtsov or Nikolai Fyodorovich Sumtsov, sometimes spelled Sumcov, was an ethnographer, folklorist, art historian, literary scholar, educator and museum expert, who flourished in the Russian Empire, Ukrainian People's Republic, and Soviet Ukraine.
Sumtsov was a champion and defender of the culture and language of Ukraine in both academic and popular realms, and contributed to a systematic history of Ukrainian literature. He delivered the first Ukrainian-language university lecture during a decades-long imperial ban, and established the H.S. Skovoroda Museum of Sloboda Ukraine.
Life and career
Mykola Sumtsov was born into a noble family, descendants of Cossacks. His father, Fyodor Ivanovich Sumtsov, worked in the Imperial Ministry of Finance in St. Petersburg, and after his retirement in 1856, moved to Kharkiv, where he died the same year. Sumtsov's mother, Anna Ivanovna, brought him up on her own. She had thorough knowledge of traditions and customs of Sloboda Ukraine as well as folk medicine. It was Anna Ivanovna, who inspired and supported his interest in folklore and traditions.He studied at the 2nd Kharkiv Boys Gymnasium, which he graduated with silver medal. The native Russian-speaker learned French and German in the gymnasium, and taught himself Ukrainian. Afterwards, he graduated History and Philology Faculty at Kharkiv University. In 1876 he undertook several courses at Heidelberg University, Germany. In 1878 Sumtsov returned to Kharkiv as a lecturer of Russian Literature. Supported by his mentor, Alexander Potebnja, he dedicated his introductory lecture to Ukrainian duma.
In 1880, he defended his Master thesis On the Wedding Rites, Mainly Russian. In 1885 Sumtsov was awarded a PhD degree for his thesis Khleb v Obriadakh i Pesniakh and in 1888 he was appointed professor.
In 1902, the 12th Archaeological Congress was held from August 15 to 27 in Kharkiv, organised by the Kharkiv Historical and Philological Society, chaired by Mykola Sumtsov. At the congress he organised an ethnographic exhibition consisting of impressive 26 sections and 1,490 artefacts. That exhibition became the foundation of Kharkiv University Ethnographic Museum, with Sumtsov as first curator from 1905 to 1918.
One of the most notable of Mykola Sumtsov's activities in support of the Ukrainian national movement was his public lecture in Ukrainian on 28 September 1907, when the ban on using Ukrainian in Ukraine had not yet been lifted.
In 1916, the Russian Geographical Society awarded Mykola Sumtsov a gold medal.
In 1917, Mykola Sumtsov, along with other members of Special Committee of Kharkiv University Board, signed an appeal to the government asking to allow free use of Ukrainian in all Kharkiv institutions.
One of the last projects undertaken by Mykola Sumtsov in 1920 to 1922 was overseeing gathering information on the local kobzars and their songs for the Gregory Skovoroda Museum of Sloboda Ukraine.
Publications
Mykola Sumtsov wrote extensively. The bibliography of his known works contains 1,544 entries. His writings mainly concern two areas of science: ethnography and literature. In addition to the local periodicals, his works were also published in Bulgarian, Polish, Bohemian, German and French academic publications.Ethnographic works
- 1881 – O brachnykh obriadakh, preimushchestvenno russkikh
- 1885 – Khleb v Obriadakh i Pesniakh
- 1886 – articles on Koliadky in Kievskaia Starina
- 1889–1890 – articles on cultural experiences in Kievskaia Starina
- 1891 – articles on Pysanky in Kievskaia Starina
- 1898 – Razyskaniia v oblasti anekdoticheskoi literatury
- 1902 – Ocherki Narodnogo Byta
- 1918 – Slobozhane: Istorychno-Etnohrafichna Rozvidka
Literary works
Membership
- 1880–1896 – Kharkiv Historical and Philological Society, secretary
- 1897–1919 – Kharkiv Historical and Philological Society, president
- 1905 – Russian Academy of Sciences, corresponding member
- 1908 – Shevchenko Scientific Society, full member
- 1919 – National [Academy of Sciences of Ukraine|All-Ukrainian Academy of Sciences], full member
Selected works
- An Essay on the History of the Witchcraft in Europe. Kharkiv University, 1878.
- On the Wedding Rites, Mainly Russian. Kharkiv University, 1881.
- Prince V. F. Odoyevsky. Moscow, 1884.
- Khleb v obriadakh i pesniakh, 1885.
- Research on Koliadki and Shchedrivki. Kiev, 1886.
- Raven in the Folk Literature. Moscow, 1890.
- Contemporary Malorussian Ethnography. Kiev, 1893–1897.
- On the Influence of Malorussian Scholastic Literature of the Seventeenth Century at the Great-Russian Old Believers Literature of the Eighteenth Century, and on the Reflection of Masonry // Kievskaya starina. 1895, vol. 51, No 12, Dep. 1, pp. 367–379.
- On the Bibliography of Old Malorussian Religious Tales. Kharkiv University, 1896.
- Razyskaniia v oblasti anekdoticheskoi literatury, 1898.
- Ocherki narodnogo byta, Kharkiv University, 1902.