Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Etnograficheskoe Obozrenie" in Turkish language version.
Much of the research in Medieval Slavic Studies continues to be published in two traditional formats: the peer-reviewed journal and the monograph. A review of citations in the International Medieval Bibliography for the past twentyfive [sic] years show the key journals indexed in Slavic Studies for this period. These journals are in alphabetical order, the Slavic publications, Acta Poloniae Historica, Byzantinoslavica, Etnograficheskoe obozrenie...
Averkieva died of cancer on October 9, 1980.
En 1889 fue publicado el primer número de Etnograficheskoe obozrenie2 –Encuesta Etnográfica– y, en 1890, el primer número de Zhivaya starina –Antigüedad Viviente–. En 1894 el académico Vladimir Radlov se convirtió en director del museo Kunstkamera en San Petersburgo, el cual se convirtió, bajo su liderazgo, en una institución de investigación activa y moderna (Schweitzer 2001: 138-142). [..] 2. La revista Etnograficheskoe obozrenie fue publicada hasta 1926, cuando su nombre fue cambiado, primero a Etnografia, de 1926 a 1929, y luego a Sovetskaya etnografia –Etnografía Soviética–, de 1930 a 1991. Después del colapso de la Unión Soviética en 1991, fue cambiado nuevamente a Ethograficheskoe obozrenie.
The career and fate of Nikolay Motorin seems to be the most indicative to this effect. In October 1930, he was elected as the director of MAE, then after merging MAE and IPIN in February 1933 he became the director of IAE. It was he who became the editor-in-chief of the central journal Soviet Ethnography. Yet, never two years passed but in December 1934 he was dismissed from his post; being accused of counterrevolutionary activities, he was then expelled from the Party (in the past he was the secretary of Grigory Zinovjev, the powerful Party leader, later the oppositionist). After almost two years in exile and prison, on October 11, 1936, he was sentenced to death and shot [Reshetev 2003, 147–179].
Much of the research in Medieval Slavic Studies continues to be published in two traditional formats: the peer-reviewed journal and the monograph. A review of citations in the International Medieval Bibliography for the past twentyfive [sic] years show the key journals indexed in Slavic Studies for this period. These journals are in alphabetical order, the Slavic publications, Acta Poloniae Historica, Byzantinoslavica, Etnograficheskoe obozrenie...
En 1889 fue publicado el primer número de Etnograficheskoe obozrenie2 –Encuesta Etnográfica– y, en 1890, el primer número de Zhivaya starina –Antigüedad Viviente–. En 1894 el académico Vladimir Radlov se convirtió en director del museo Kunstkamera en San Petersburgo, el cual se convirtió, bajo su liderazgo, en una institución de investigación activa y moderna (Schweitzer 2001: 138-142). [..] 2. La revista Etnograficheskoe obozrenie fue publicada hasta 1926, cuando su nombre fue cambiado, primero a Etnografia, de 1926 a 1929, y luego a Sovetskaya etnografia –Etnografía Soviética–, de 1930 a 1991. Después del colapso de la Unión Soviética en 1991, fue cambiado nuevamente a Ethograficheskoe obozrenie.
Averkieva died of cancer on October 9, 1980.
The career and fate of Nikolay Motorin seems to be the most indicative to this effect. In October 1930, he was elected as the director of MAE, then after merging MAE and IPIN in February 1933 he became the director of IAE. It was he who became the editor-in-chief of the central journal Soviet Ethnography. Yet, never two years passed but in December 1934 he was dismissed from his post; being accused of counterrevolutionary activities, he was then expelled from the Party (in the past he was the secretary of Grigory Zinovjev, the powerful Party leader, later the oppositionist). After almost two years in exile and prison, on October 11, 1936, he was sentenced to death and shot [Reshetev 2003, 147–179].
En 1889 fue publicado el primer número de Etnograficheskoe obozrenie2 –Encuesta Etnográfica– y, en 1890, el primer número de Zhivaya starina –Antigüedad Viviente–. En 1894 el académico Vladimir Radlov se convirtió en director del museo Kunstkamera en San Petersburgo, el cual se convirtió, bajo su liderazgo, en una institución de investigación activa y moderna (Schweitzer 2001: 138-142). [..] 2. La revista Etnograficheskoe obozrenie fue publicada hasta 1926, cuando su nombre fue cambiado, primero a Etnografia, de 1926 a 1929, y luego a Sovetskaya etnografia –Etnografía Soviética–, de 1930 a 1991. Después del colapso de la Unión Soviética en 1991, fue cambiado nuevamente a Ethograficheskoe obozrenie.
Averkieva died of cancer on October 9, 1980.
The career and fate of Nikolay Motorin seems to be the most indicative to this effect. In October 1930, he was elected as the director of MAE, then after merging MAE and IPIN in February 1933 he became the director of IAE. It was he who became the editor-in-chief of the central journal Soviet Ethnography. Yet, never two years passed but in December 1934 he was dismissed from his post; being accused of counterrevolutionary activities, he was then expelled from the Party (in the past he was the secretary of Grigory Zinovjev, the powerful Party leader, later the oppositionist). After almost two years in exile and prison, on October 11, 1936, he was sentenced to death and shot [Reshetev 2003, 147–179].