Pamvo Berynda
Pamvo Berynda – died on July 23 was a Ukrainian lexicographer, linguist, and Orthodox monk, best remembered for authoring The Slovene – Rus' Lexicon. He was also one of the pioneers of Ukrainian drama.
Life
An engraver and printer by profession, Berynda was a highly educated person and knew Old Church Slavonic, Greek, Latin and Polish languages. He was born around the third quarter of the 16th century. The presence of local dialectisms in Berynda's publications hints at his origins from Boikivshchyna, Pokuttia or Upper Dniester region. Under the patronage of Hedeon Balaban, in 1597-1608 he worked at the printing houses in Striatyn and Krylos. His 1606 didactic gospels for the first time in Ukrainian printing included illustrations to the text. In 1613-1619 Berynda worked at the school and printing house of Lviv Orthodox brotherhood. After 1619 together with his son he moved to Kyiv and settled in Kyiv Pechersk Lavra monastery, where he remained for the rest of his life. In Kyiv Berynda worked as an editor, translator, printer and engraver. During that time he was affiliated with a group of intellectuals headed by Yelysei Pletenetskyi. He died on 23 July 1632.Main works
Berynda's Lexicon, printed in 1627 in Kyiv, included the translation of more than 7,000 words from Church Slavonic into Old Ukrainian. Continuing the legacy of Zyzaniy's Leksys, it was the first dictionary in East Slavic lands composed in accordance to scientific norms. A second edition of the work emerged in 1653 at a monastery near Orsha. The Lexicon played an important role in the standardization of both Church Slavonic and Ukrainian language and was used as a schoolbook until the end of the 18th century.Berynda also contributed to a number of publications issued by Kyiv Pechersk Lavra and wrote panegyric epigrams for a number of prominent people, including metropolitan Petro Mohyla. His 1616 book "На рожство... вЂршЂ для утЂхи православним христіаном", dedicated to Lviv archbishop Jeremiah Tysarowski, introduced dramatic elements and decorations and can be seen as a prototype of school drama. Berynda was also an author of a number of woodcuts.