157:(Yakut), accompanied by his wife Dina Brodskaya, a qualified doctor, who took care of all the anthropometric and medical work, and most of the photography. The expedition was intended to create a comprehensive record of the peoples being studied, and a very wide range of artefacts and material objects were collected, as well as the final ethnographies and written field-notes of the participants. Jochelson returned with the expedition to the United States, studying there the material which he and his wife, who accompanied him in the last journey, had collected.
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134:. On that expedition Jochelson discovered among the natives in the outlying regions two Yukaghir dialects then considered as extinct. The Imperial Geographical Society published his discoveries in the field of ethnology, while the linguistic reports of his investigation were acquired for publication by the Imperial Academy of Science.
149:, in answer to a request, recommended Jochelson and Bogoraz as the men best fitted to contribute to its success by knowledge of the country and of the native languages. For the expedition Jochelson spent two and a half years in the distant north, studying primarily the
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in St. Petersburg, and lectured at the university there. He emigrated to New York in 1922 and spent the rest of his life in the United States, where he renewed his association with the
American Museum of Natural History, and later with the
79:. Compelled to leave Russia in 1875, he went first to Berlin and then in 1879 to Switzerland, where he remained four years, studying at Zurich and then teaching at a school on the
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Jochelson contributed extensively to scientific journals in
Russian, German and English. In English his best-known full works are his volumes
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In
Siberia Jochelson made a special study of the language, manners, and folk-lore of the aboriginal inhabitants, especially that of the
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in St. Petersburg, and in 1887 was sentenced by order of the czar to exile for ten years in northern
Siberia, in the province of
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130:(1894–97), which had been sent to that part of Siberia at the expense of a wealthy Russian promoter of art and science named
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Biographies of the
Individuals Associated with the American Museum of Natural History's Jesup North Pacific Expedition
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In 1909–11 Jochelson led the
Riaboushinsky Expedition of the Imperial Russian Geographic Society to
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223:(1928), both for the Carnegie Institution. His final work focussed on refining his work on the
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Also: Waldemar
Jochelson, Vladimir I. Iochel'son, Vladimir Ilič Iochelʹson
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278: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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The Museum at the End of the World: Encounters in the
Russian Far East
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187:, and then from 1912 to 1922 he was a divisional curator of the
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106:, taken by Vladimir Jochelson during the Jesup Expedition
215:(1928) for the American Museum of Natural History; and
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256:. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
330:On socialists and "the Jewish question" after Marx
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211:(1926) for the Jesup Expedition; his handbook
141:to north Asia was being fitted out by the
539:19th-century Jews from the Russian Empire
448:. Accessed (via Google cache) 5 July 2011
432:. Accessed (via Google cache) 5 July 2011
221:Archeological Investigations in Kamchatka
63:Jochelson came from a wealthy, religious
252:Alexia Bloch and Laurel Kendall (2004),
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484:Anthropologists from the Russian Empire
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227:language, and preparing a study of the
171:taken by Vladimir Jochelson during the
53:indigenous peoples of the Russian North
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189:Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography
554:Soviet emigrants to the United States
499:Ethnographers from the Russian Empire
442:Asian Ethnographic Collection at AMNH
128:Imperial Russian Geographical Society
461:Waldemar Jochelson papers, 1909-1937
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333:. New York: NYU Press. p. 180.
209:The Yukaghir and Yukaghirized Tungus
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147:Russian Imperial Academy of Science
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446:American Museum of Natural History
430:American Museum of Natural History
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143:American Museum of Natural History
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305:. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
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241:Peoples of Asiatic Russia (1928)
509:Linguists of Yukaghir languages
504:Linguists of Eskaleut languages
327:Jacobs, Jack (August 1, 1993).
71:, where he participated in the
524:Vilna Rabbinical School alumni
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173:Jesup North Pacific Expedition
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193:Russian Academy of Sciences
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401:(2), 375–384, April 1930.
534:20th-century Russian Jews
213:Peoples of Asiatic Russia
69:Vilna Rabbinical Seminary
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25:Vladimir Ilyich Jochelson
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67:family. He attended the
33:Владимир Ильич Иохельсон
465:New York Public Library
394:American Anthropologist
302:The Jewish Encyclopedia
89:Petro-Pavlovsk fortress
549:20th-century linguists
544:19th-century linguists
467:. Accessed 5 July 2011
299:; et al. (eds.).
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85:Vyestnik Narodnoi Voli
75:, revolutionary group
51:and researcher of the
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293:"Jochelson, Waldemar"
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200:in Washington, D.C.
198:Carnegie Institution
43:- November 2, 1937,
559:People from Vilnius
372:Jewish Encyclopedia
368:Jochelson, Waldemar
39:January 26), 1855,
514:Linguists of Sakha
424:2011-06-04 at the
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20:Vladimir Jochelson
340:978-0-8147-4213-6
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529:Jewish linguists
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185:Aleutian Islands
153:, Yukaghir, and
145:(New York), the
139:Jesup expedition
124:Vladimir Bogoraz
102:Photograph of a
47:) was a Russian
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77:Narodnaya Volya
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104:Tungus Laika
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49:ethnographer
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494:1937 deaths
489:1855 births
219:(1925) and
207:(1908) and
205:The Koryaks
478:Categories
346:August 17,
269:References
132:Sibiryakov
229:Kamchadal
181:Kamchatka
137:When the
120:Yukaghirs
73:socialist
59:Biography
422:Archived
231:people.
183:and the
165:Yukaghir
389:Profile
374:, 1906.
282::
191:of the
175:in 1901
151:Koryaks
93:Yakutsk
41:Vilnius
29:Russian
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260:
116:Yakuts
112:Tungus
65:Jewish
295:. In
235:Works
225:Aleut
169:laika
155:Sakha
348:2009
335:ISBN
287:and
258:ISBN
37:N.S.
403:doi
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27:(
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