In Memoriam
Omeljan Pritsak
7 April 1919 - 29 May 2006
29 May 2006
With deep regret,
the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute announces the passing on
29 May 2006 of Omeljan Pritsak, Mykhailo Hrushevsky Professor of
Ukrainian History, Emeritus, and co-founder and long-time director
of the Ukrainian Research Institute.
Born on 7 April 1919 in Luka, Sambir region, Ukraine, Omeljan Pritsak
completed his secondary education in Ternopil. His higher education,
with a concentration in Ukrainian and also, increasingly over time,
Turkic history and philology, took place at the University of Lviv,
the Academy of Sciences of Ukraine in Kyiv, and the Universities
of Berlin and Göttingen, from which he received his doctorate in
1948.
A professor of Turkology at the University of Hamburg, Pritsak was
invited to Harvard University in 1960 and the University of Washington
in 1961. He permanently joined the Harvard faculty as professor
of linguistics and Turkology in 1964.
From early in his career, Pritsak became an internationally recognized
scholar in historical and comparative Turkic and Altaic linguistics,
and a leading authority on the history and culture of the Eurasian
Steppe. At Harvard University, Pritsak resumed his early study of
Ukrainian history and turned increasingly to the research and analysis
of the Ukrainian past in context, drawing on his impressive linguistic
talents in Central and East Asian languages to flesh out that history
with material previously underrepresented or unknown.
In 1967, Pritsak proposed the creation of a firm foundation for
the development of Ukrainian studies in the West through the establishment
of three endowed chairs (history, literature, philology) and a
research institute at Harvard University. This project was accomplished
thanks to the efforts of the Ukrainian Studies Fund which raised
the necessary funds within the Ukrainian diaspora community. The
Ukrainian Research Institute came into being in 1973 with Pritsak
as its first director. In 1975, he was given the Hrushevsky Chair
in Ukrainian history. In 1977, Pritsak helped to launch the journal Harvard
Ukrainian Studies .
He was instrumental in the organization of a weekly seminar series ,
building up the Ukrainian library collections, and in
developing new series of publications that made primary texts,
facsimile editions, and translations of important works of the
Ukrainian past available to scholars worldwide.
Through his inspired teaching and energetic example, Pritsak helped
to train and influence many generations of students, who have gone
on to fill important academic positions in the United States, Canada,
Europe, and Asia. A scholar of enormous erudition, Pritsak produced
a bibliography of over 500 entries.
When he retired in 1989, Pritsak became increasingly involved in
the revival of academic studies in Ukraine itself. He was elected
the first foreign member of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. He
revived the Institute of Oriental Studies in Kyiv, introducing new
programs in that field and many other neglected areas of historical
scholarship on the university level.
Omeljan Pritsak is survived by his wife Larysa Hvozdik Pritsak,
his daughter Irene Pritsak by his late first wife Nina Moldenhauer
Pritsak, and two grandchildren Lailina Eberhard and Michael Wissoff.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to be made to
the publications fund of the Ukrainian Research Institute. Checks
should be made out to the Ukrainian Studies Fund, 34 Kirkland Street,
Cambridge, MA 02138. (When making out checks, kindly indicate on
the memo line that the donation is in memory of Omeljan Pritsak.)
A memorial service for Omeljan Pritsak, and a celebration of his
life and scholarly achievements, is planned by the Ukrainian Research
Institute to take place at Harvard University in the fall of 2006.