Blagoy Shklifov
Blagoy Stefanov Shklifov (Bulgarian: Благой Стефанов Шклифов; January 30, 1935 – September 25, 2003) was a Bulgarian dialectologist and phonologist.
Blagoy Shklifov | |
---|---|
Born | January 30, 1935 |
Died | |
Nationality | Greek/Bulgarian |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Linguistics, Dialectology |
Shklifov was born in Polykeraso (Chereshnitsa), Vitsi municipality, Kastoria Prefecture, Greece in 1935.
In 1948, at the end of the Greek Civil War, he left his burned village and after a short stay in Socialist Republic of Macedonia went to Hungary, with many refugees from Greek Macedonia. In 1964, he went to Bulgaria and studied at Sofia University "St. Clement of Ohrid". He was a lecturer at the University of Szeged, Hungary and at Sofia University, Bulgaria.
In his books, he claimed that the Slavophones of Greek Macedonia are Bulgarians. For this reason, he was not permitted to enter Greece for 40 years.[1] He died in September 2003 in a car crash during a field work trip in Greece. Some of his colleagues suspect he was murdered.[2][3]
Work
Shklifov specialised on Bulgarian dialectology, especially the phonetics of South-West Bulgarian (Macedonian) dialects and their connection with Old Bulgarian. Considering these dialects in comparative plan with Old Bulgarian he explained the development of many sounds, for example ѫ, not with external influences, but with internal processes in the language.[4]
Shklifov regarded the western Slavic dialects of Greece as a part of the Bulgarian dialect area.
Notes
- в.Новинар, 26.09.2003 г.
- Владимир Йончев. Загиналият наш учен в Гърция блъснат от кола без светлини, В. "Новинар", 27.09.2003
- сп. "България Македония", Брой 4, 2007, Загадъчната смърт на българския учен Благой Шклифов.
- Тот, Имре. Предговор към Шклифов, Благой. Проблеми на българската диалектна и историческа фонетика с оглед на македонските говори, София 1995, с. 7-8 (Thoth, Imre. Preface, in: Shklifov, Blagoy. Problems of the Bulgarian dialectal phonology from the point of view of the Macedonian dialects, Sofia 1995, p. 7-8)