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Albert Wratislaw : ウィキペディア英語版 | Albert Wratislaw Albert Henry Wratislaw (1822–1892) was an English Slavonic scholar, of Czech descent. ==Early life== The grandson of an émigré of 1790, and son of William Ferdinand, 'Count' Wratislaw von Mitro-vitz (1788–1853), a solicitor of Rugby, by his wife, Charlotte Anne (d. 1863), was born at Rugby on 5 Nov. 1822. He entered Rugby School, aged seven, on 5 Nov. 1829 (Register, i. 161), and matriculated at Cambridge from Trinity College in 1840, but migrated to Christ's, where he was admitted 28 April 1842; he graduated B.A. as third classic and twenty-fifth senior optime in 1844. Having in the meantime been appointed fellow (1844–1853) and tutor of his college, he commenced M.A. in 1847, and next year, in collaboration with Dr. Charles Anthony Swainson, published ''Loci Communes: Common Places.'' During the long vacation of 1849 he visited Bohemia, studied the Czech language in Prague, and in the same autumn published at London ''Lyra Czecho Slovanska, or Bohemian poems, ancient and modern, translated from the original Slavonic, with an introductory essay,'' which he dedicated to Count Valerian Krasinski, as "from a descendant of a kindred race."
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