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Eric P. Hamp

Eric Pratt Hamp (November 16, 1920 – February 17, 2019) was an American linguist widely respected as a leading authority on Indo-European linguistics, with particular interests in Celtic languages and Albanian. Unlike many Indo-Europeanists, who work entirely on the basis of written materials, he conducted extensive fieldwork on lesser-known Indo-European languages and dialects, such as Albanian, Arbëresh and Arvanitika; Breton; Welsh; Irish; Resian and Scots Gaelic.

Eric Pratt Hamp
Stamp
BornNovember 16, 1920
London, England, U.K.
DiedFebruary 17, 2019(2019-02-17) (aged 98)
Traverse City, Michigan, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
OccupationLinguist
Spouse
Margot Faust
(m. 1951)
Children2

His wide-ranging interests also included American Indian languages. He served for many years as editor of the International Journal of American Linguistics and did field work on Quileute and Ojibwa. He also studied linguistic aspects of braille.[1]

Hamp's scholarship was characterized by the densely argued, narrowly focused note, essay and review, generally consisting of a few pages. He wrote more than 3,500 articles and reviews, and nearly every important aspect of historical linguistics was dealt with, often multiple times, in Hamp's writings.

He was the Robert Maynard Hutchins Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at the University of Chicago[2] and in spite of his advanced age, he continued to write, edit, speak and travel at select meetings and conferences,[3] and was an Associate Editor of the journal Anthropological Linguistics. He died in February 2019 at the age of 98.[4][5]

Early life edit

Hamp was born in London in 1920 and moved to the United States in 1925 when his father became the New York representative of the Silver Line, a British shipping company. Growing up in East Orange, New Jersey, Hamp was sent to the Tome School in 1935 and entered Amherst College in the fall of 1938. He received his BA from Amherst, majoring in Greek and Latin, in 1942.

Hamp was still a British subject during the early years of World War II, and he spent the period immediately after college as a purchasing agent for the Union of South Africa under Lend-Lease, which provided U.S. war materiel to the Allies. He then became a U.S. citizen and served in the U.S. Army, being discharged in 1947 at the rank of sergeant.

Hamp resumed his studies in 1947, entering the Department of Comparative Philology at Harvard University (the department was renamed the Department of Linguistics in 1951), from which he received an MA (1948) and PhD (1954). Among Hamp's teachers at Harvard were Joshua Whatmough and Kenneth H. Jackson.[6]

Career edit

Hamp became interested in Albanian while in graduate school at Harvard, and he traveled to southern Italy to do field work among the Arbëreshë people, an Albanian ethnolinguistic group in southern Italy. It was in Italy in 1950 that he received an invitation to join the faculty of the University of Chicago as a lecturer in Linguistics.

Hamp spent his entire academic career on the University of Chicago faculty, being promoted to assistant professor in 1953, associate professor in 1958 and full professor in 1962. He retired from teaching in 1991. At Chicago, he was the Robert Maynard Hutchins Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in the Department of Linguistics, where he served as chair from 1966 to 1969.

Hamp also held appointments at the University of Chicago in the departments of Psychology and Slavic Languages and Literatures, as well as in the Committee on the Ancient Mediterranean World. He served as director for the Center for Balkan and Slavic Studies from 1965 to 1991.

He was a visiting fellow and faculty member at a number of institutions throughout the world, including the University of Michigan; the University of Wisconsin; the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies; the University of Edinburgh; and the Luigj Gurakuqi University of Shkodër, Albania. In 1960, he held the Hermann and Klara H. Collitz Professorship for Comparative Philology at the Linguistic Society of America Summer Institute at the University of Texas.

Hamp was a prodigious lecturer, and among the invited talks he has given were the Rudolf Thurneysen Memorial Lecture at the University of Bonn and the James W. Poultney Lecture at Johns Hopkins University.

Selected honors edit

Hamp's extensive career brought him recognition from multiple disciplines in language studies, including six Festschriften: one in general linguistics, two in Balkan studies, one in Native American languages, one in Indo-European linguistics and one in Celtic studies. These works include Studies in Balkan Linguistics to Honor Eric P. Hamp on his Sixtieth Birthday, Folia Slavica 4, 2–3, published in 1981 and edited by Howard I. Aronson and Bill J. Darden; Celtic Language, Celtic Culture: A Festschrift for Eric P. Hamp, published in 1990 and edited by A.T. E. Matonis and Daniel F. Melia; and Scritti in onore di Eric Pratt Hamp per il suo 90. compleanno, edited by Giovanni Belluscio and Antonio Mendicino of the University of Calabria and published in 2010 (ISBN 9 788874 581016).

Hamp was a member of many academies and learned societies, including the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,[7] the American Philosophical Society,[8] the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters[9] and the Albanian Academy of Sciences, and he received honorary doctorates from Amherst College, University of Wales, the University of Calabria, the University of Delhi, and the University of Edinburgh.[10]

On his 92nd birthday in 2012, Posta Shqiptare, the national postal service of Albania, honored Hamp with a 50 lekë stamp in a series commemorating foreign Albanologists, linguists who have studied the Albanian language.[11] Hamp was the only living Albanologist honored in the series, the two other commemorated linguists being Norbert Jokl and Holger Pedersen.

Personal life edit

Hamp married Margot Faust, a lecturer in Art Education at the University of Chicago, in 1951. She often assisted him in his field work.[12] They had two children: a daughter, Julijana, and a son, Alex. They remained married for more than 67 years until Hamp's death in 2019.[13]

Selected works edit

  • Author: A Glossary of American Technical Linguistic Usage, 3d rev. ed., 1966, Vaccarizzo Albanese Phonology, 1993
  • (with others) Language and Machines, 1966
  • Co-editor Readings in Linguistics I & II, abridged ed., 1995, Languages and Areas: Studies presented to George V. Bobrinskoy, 1967, Themes in Linguistics: The 1970s, 1973
  • Advisory editor: Foundations of Language 1964–74, Studies in Language, 1974–79, General Linguistics, 1966–91, Papers in Language and Lit., 1965–92, Journal Linguistics, 1971–81, Journal Indo-European Studies, 1972—, Folia Linguistica Historica, 1978–98, Ann. of Armenian Linguistics, 1978—, Anthropological Linguistics, 1981—, Études Celtiques, 1982—, Journal Historical Linguistics and Philology, 1982–90, Glossologia (Athens), 1983–99, Jewish Language Rev. (Haifa), 1983, Medieval Language Rev., 1991—, Linguistics Abstracts, 1985, 95, Voprosy Jazykoznanija (Moscow), 1988–92, Studia Indogermanica, 1990—, Albanica, 1991–93
  • Associate editor: International Journal of American Linguistics, 1967–92, emeritus editor, 1992—, Native American Texts Series, 1974—, founding editor
  • Atlas Linguarum Europae, 1984—
  • Section head comparative and hist. linguistics: Celtic and Albanian sections Modern Language Association Ann. Bibliography, 1969–82
  • Advisor: Encyclopedia Brit., 1969–2000, member advisory committee, 1985–2000
  • Member adv. board and contributor Pergamon-Aberdeen Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 1988–94
  • Member Advisory Board Slavia Centralis, 2009—
  • Adv. and project linguist Braille Reading and Language Programs and Braille Research Center, Am. Printing House for the Blind, 1977–96, member International English Braille Linguistics committee, 1994—
  • Editor for etymologies: Random House Unabridged Dictionary (rev. ed.)
  • Participant in Yeniseic-Tlingit-Athabaskan Familial Proof, Tokyo, Leipzig and Alaska 2004,-06, 08, 10
  • Author ca. 1,500 articles in field.

Bibliography edit

Among the more than 3500 articles, reviews and other works Eric Hamp produced, some notable ones are:

  • Hamp, Eric P., Martin Joos, Fred W. Householder, and Robert Austerlitz, editors Readings in Linguistics I & II. With a new Preface by Eric Hamp. Abridged edition. 302 p. 8½ × 11 1957, 1966, 1995
  • Hamp, Eric P. "Mabinogi." Transactions of the Honourable Society of the Cymmrodorion . 1974–75. 243-49.
  • Hamp, Eric. 1979. "Toward the history of Slavic scholarship," Slovene Studies 1/2: 61–62.
  • Hamp, Eric. 1988. "Indo-European o-grade deverbal thematics in Slovene," Slovene Studies 10/1: 65–70
  • Hamp, Eric. 1989. "On the survival of Slovene o-grade deverbal thematics in Resian," Slovene Studies 10/2: 171–173.
  • Hamp, Eric. 1989. "Chronological marriage patterns in Resia," Slovene Studies 10/2: 201–202.
  • Hamp, Eric. 1996. "On the Indo-European origins of the retroflexes in Sanskrit." The Journal of the American Oriental Society, October 21, 1996: 719–724.
  • Hamp, Eric. 1999. "Mabinogi and Archaism" Celtica 23, 1999: 96–110.
  • Hamp, Eric. 2007. Studime krahasuese për shqipen (Comparative studies on Albanian) edited by Rexhep Ismajli, Akademia e Shkencave dhe e Arteve e Kosovës, Prishtinë.

References edit

  1. ^ Hamp, Eric, et al., Four Analytic Studies of the American Literary Braille Code, American Printing House for the Blind, 1995.
  2. ^ "Eric P. Hamp, renowned linguist of lesser-known languages, 1920–2019". University of Chicago. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  3. ^ Metcalf, Allan, "The Most Demanding Science: Homage to Eric Hamp", Lingua Franca blog, The Chronicle of Higher Education, 16 January 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  4. ^ Linguist List – Obituary: Eric Hamp (1920–2019)
  5. ^ (in Albanian). 20 February 2019. Archived from the original on 29 May 2019. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  6. ^ Meckler, Michael, "Eric P. Hamp: 16 November 1920 - 17 February 2019," North American Journal of Celtic Studies 3.2 (Autumn 2019): 201-209, contains further information on Hamp's life.
  7. ^ Book of Members/H
  8. ^ American Philosophical Society, Eric P. Hamp's member history in the American Philosophical Society
  9. ^ Eric P. Hamp, Entry for Eric P. Hamp in the directory of international members of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters
  10. ^ Honorary degree for Professor Eric Hamp – University of Edinburgh. School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures. Celtic & Scottish Studies. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  11. ^ 50 lekë stamp from Albania honoring Eric Hamp Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  12. ^ Meckler, pp.204-206.
  13. ^ Megan, Graydon, "Eric Hamp, U. of C. linguist who studied how languages change, dies at 98," Chicago Tribune, 1 March 2019. Retrieved 26 April 2020.

External links edit

  • Books[permanent dead link]
  • Linguistic Society of America Summer Institutes
  • Anthropological Linguistics
  • University of Chicago Linguistics faculty – Emeritus category

eric, hamp, eric, pratt, hamp, november, 1920, february, 2019, american, linguist, widely, respected, leading, authority, indo, european, linguistics, with, particular, interests, celtic, languages, albanian, unlike, many, indo, europeanists, work, entirely, b. Eric Pratt Hamp November 16 1920 February 17 2019 was an American linguist widely respected as a leading authority on Indo European linguistics with particular interests in Celtic languages and Albanian Unlike many Indo Europeanists who work entirely on the basis of written materials he conducted extensive fieldwork on lesser known Indo European languages and dialects such as Albanian Arberesh and Arvanitika Breton Welsh Irish Resian and Scots Gaelic Eric Pratt HampStampBornNovember 16 1920London England U K DiedFebruary 17 2019 2019 02 17 aged 98 Traverse City Michigan U S NationalityAmericanOccupationLinguistSpouseMargot Faust m 1951 wbr Children2 His wide ranging interests also included American Indian languages He served for many years as editor of the International Journal of American Linguistics and did field work on Quileute and Ojibwa He also studied linguistic aspects of braille 1 Hamp s scholarship was characterized by the densely argued narrowly focused note essay and review generally consisting of a few pages He wrote more than 3 500 articles and reviews and nearly every important aspect of historical linguistics was dealt with often multiple times in Hamp s writings He was the Robert Maynard Hutchins Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at the University of Chicago 2 and in spite of his advanced age he continued to write edit speak and travel at select meetings and conferences 3 and was an Associate Editor of the journal Anthropological Linguistics He died in February 2019 at the age of 98 4 5 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Selected honors 4 Personal life 5 Selected works 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editHamp was born in London in 1920 and moved to the United States in 1925 when his father became the New York representative of the Silver Line a British shipping company Growing up in East Orange New Jersey Hamp was sent to the Tome School in 1935 and entered Amherst College in the fall of 1938 He received his BA from Amherst majoring in Greek and Latin in 1942 Hamp was still a British subject during the early years of World War II and he spent the period immediately after college as a purchasing agent for the Union of South Africa under Lend Lease which provided U S war materiel to the Allies He then became a U S citizen and served in the U S Army being discharged in 1947 at the rank of sergeant Hamp resumed his studies in 1947 entering the Department of Comparative Philology at Harvard University the department was renamed the Department of Linguistics in 1951 from which he received an MA 1948 and PhD 1954 Among Hamp s teachers at Harvard were Joshua Whatmough and Kenneth H Jackson 6 Career editHamp became interested in Albanian while in graduate school at Harvard and he traveled to southern Italy to do field work among the Arbereshe people an Albanian ethnolinguistic group in southern Italy It was in Italy in 1950 that he received an invitation to join the faculty of the University of Chicago as a lecturer in Linguistics Hamp spent his entire academic career on the University of Chicago faculty being promoted to assistant professor in 1953 associate professor in 1958 and full professor in 1962 He retired from teaching in 1991 At Chicago he was the Robert Maynard Hutchins Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in the Department of Linguistics where he served as chair from 1966 to 1969 Hamp also held appointments at the University of Chicago in the departments of Psychology and Slavic Languages and Literatures as well as in the Committee on the Ancient Mediterranean World He served as director for the Center for Balkan and Slavic Studies from 1965 to 1991 He was a visiting fellow and faculty member at a number of institutions throughout the world including the University of Michigan the University of Wisconsin the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies the University of Edinburgh and the Luigj Gurakuqi University of Shkoder Albania In 1960 he held the Hermann and Klara H Collitz Professorship for Comparative Philology at the Linguistic Society of America Summer Institute at the University of Texas Hamp was a prodigious lecturer and among the invited talks he has given were the Rudolf Thurneysen Memorial Lecture at the University of Bonn and the James W Poultney Lecture at Johns Hopkins University Selected honors editHamp s extensive career brought him recognition from multiple disciplines in language studies including six Festschriften one in general linguistics two in Balkan studies one in Native American languages one in Indo European linguistics and one in Celtic studies These works include Studies in Balkan Linguistics to Honor Eric P Hamp on his Sixtieth Birthday Folia Slavica 4 2 3 published in 1981 and edited by Howard I Aronson and Bill J Darden Celtic Language Celtic Culture A Festschrift for Eric P Hamp published in 1990 and edited by A T E Matonis and Daniel F Melia and Scritti in onore di Eric Pratt Hamp per il suo 90 compleanno edited by Giovanni Belluscio and Antonio Mendicino of the University of Calabria and published in 2010 ISBN 9 788874 581016 Hamp was a member of many academies and learned societies including the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 7 the American Philosophical Society 8 the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters 9 and the Albanian Academy of Sciences and he received honorary doctorates from Amherst College University of Wales the University of Calabria the University of Delhi and the University of Edinburgh 10 On his 92nd birthday in 2012 Posta Shqiptare the national postal service of Albania honored Hamp with a 50 leke stamp in a series commemorating foreign Albanologists linguists who have studied the Albanian language 11 Hamp was the only living Albanologist honored in the series the two other commemorated linguists being Norbert Jokl and Holger Pedersen Personal life editHamp married Margot Faust a lecturer in Art Education at the University of Chicago in 1951 She often assisted him in his field work 12 They had two children a daughter Julijana and a son Alex They remained married for more than 67 years until Hamp s death in 2019 13 Selected works editAuthor A Glossary of American Technical Linguistic Usage 3d rev ed 1966 Vaccarizzo Albanese Phonology 1993 with others Language and Machines 1966 Co editor Readings in Linguistics I amp II abridged ed 1995 Languages and Areas Studies presented to George V Bobrinskoy 1967 Themes in Linguistics The 1970s 1973 Advisory editor Foundations of Language 1964 74 Studies in Language 1974 79 General Linguistics 1966 91 Papers in Language and Lit 1965 92 Journal Linguistics 1971 81 Journal Indo European Studies 1972 Folia Linguistica Historica 1978 98 Ann of Armenian Linguistics 1978 Anthropological Linguistics 1981 Etudes Celtiques 1982 Journal Historical Linguistics and Philology 1982 90 Glossologia Athens 1983 99 Jewish Language Rev Haifa 1983 Medieval Language Rev 1991 Linguistics Abstracts 1985 95 Voprosy Jazykoznanija Moscow 1988 92 Studia Indogermanica 1990 Albanica 1991 93 Associate editor International Journal of American Linguistics 1967 92 emeritus editor 1992 Native American Texts Series 1974 founding editor Atlas Linguarum Europae 1984 Section head comparative and hist linguistics Celtic and Albanian sections Modern Language Association Ann Bibliography 1969 82 Advisor Encyclopedia Brit 1969 2000 member advisory committee 1985 2000 Member adv board and contributor Pergamon Aberdeen Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics 1988 94 Member Advisory Board Slavia Centralis 2009 Adv and project linguist Braille Reading and Language Programs and Braille Research Center Am Printing House for the Blind 1977 96 member International English Braille Linguistics committee 1994 Editor for etymologies Random House Unabridged Dictionary rev ed Participant in Yeniseic Tlingit Athabaskan Familial Proof Tokyo Leipzig and Alaska 2004 06 08 10 Author ca 1 500 articles in field Bibliography editAmong the more than 3500 articles reviews and other works Eric Hamp produced some notable ones are Hamp Eric P Martin Joos Fred W Householder and Robert Austerlitz editors Readings in Linguistics I amp II With a new Preface by Eric Hamp Abridged edition 302 p 8 11 1957 1966 1995 Hamp Eric P Mabinogi Transactions of the Honourable Society of the Cymmrodorion 1974 75 243 49 Hamp Eric 1979 Toward the history of Slavic scholarship Slovene Studies 1 2 61 62 Hamp Eric 1988 Indo European o grade deverbal thematics in Slovene Slovene Studies 10 1 65 70 Hamp Eric 1989 On the survival of Slovene o grade deverbal thematics in Resian Slovene Studies 10 2 171 173 Hamp Eric 1989 Chronological marriage patterns in Resia Slovene Studies 10 2 201 202 Hamp Eric 1996 On the Indo European origins of the retroflexes in Sanskrit The Journal of the American Oriental Society October 21 1996 719 724 Hamp Eric 1999 Mabinogi and Archaism Celtica 23 1999 96 110 Hamp Eric 2007 Studime krahasuese per shqipen Comparative studies on Albanian edited by Rexhep Ismajli Akademia e Shkencave dhe e Arteve e Kosoves Prishtine References edit Hamp Eric et al Four Analytic Studies of the American Literary Braille Code American Printing House for the Blind 1995 Eric P Hamp renowned linguist of lesser known languages 1920 2019 University of Chicago Retrieved 21 December 2019 Metcalf Allan The Most Demanding Science Homage to Eric Hamp Lingua Franca blog The Chronicle of Higher Education 16 January 2013 Retrieved 21 December 2019 Linguist List Obituary Eric Hamp 1920 2019 Gjuhetari amerikan Eric Hamp per shqipen in Albanian 20 February 2019 Archived from the original on 29 May 2019 Retrieved 21 December 2019 Meckler Michael Eric P Hamp 16 November 1920 17 February 2019 North American Journal of Celtic Studies 3 2 Autumn 2019 201 209 contains further information on Hamp s life Book of Members H American Philosophical Society Eric P Hamp s member history in the American Philosophical Society Eric P Hamp Entry for Eric P Hamp in the directory of international members of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters Honorary degree for Professor Eric Hamp University of Edinburgh School of Literatures Languages and Cultures Celtic amp Scottish Studies Retrieved 21 December 2019 50 leke stamp from Albania honoring Eric Hamp Retrieved 21 December 2019 Meckler pp 204 206 Megan Graydon Eric Hamp U of C linguist who studied how languages change dies at 98 Chicago Tribune 1 March 2019 Retrieved 26 April 2020 External links editBooks permanent dead link Linguistic Society of America Summer Institutes Anthropological Linguistics University of Chicago archives University of Chicago Linguistics faculty Emeritus category Eric P Hamp s member history in the American Philosophical Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eric P Hamp amp oldid 1210791492, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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