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Max Leopold Wagner : ウィキペディア英語版 | Max Leopold Wagner Max Leopold Wagner (17 September 1880, Munich – 9July 1962, Washington, D.C.) was a German philologist and ethnologist, particularly known for his studies on the Sardinian language. He also carried out pioneering research on the Spanish language in Hispanic America. In a posthumous review of his three-volume ''Dizionario etimologico sardo'', Ernst Pulgram wrote: ''It can only be hoped that ... there will arise ... men like Wagner: original thinkers, deep specialists, and great synthesizers of knowledge all at the same time.'' ==Biography== Wagner gained his doctorate from the University of Würzburg, Germany; his thesis was entitled ''Lautlehre der südsardischen Mundarten'' (published in 1907). He then taught languages in Istanbul, learning Arabic, Greek, Turkish and Rumanian. He started to study Judeo-Spanish and became interested in Hispanic studies, moving to Mexico in 1913 and subsequently travelling in Latin America. He returned to Germany after the start of the First World War, taking a position at the University of Berlin. In the mid-1920s, he moved to Italy, spending most of his time in Rome and Naples, and working on the Italian linguistic atlas, ''AIS - Sprach- und Sachatlas Italiens und der Südschweiz'', under Karl Jaberg and Jakob Jud.〔 He held an academic position at the University of Coimbra, Portugal (1947–51), as well as a guest professorship at the University of Illinois, USA (1948–49). He then moved to Washington, USA, where he worked on his ''Dizionario etimologico sardo'', with the assistance of Raffaele Urciolo, until his death in 1962.〔
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