Stanisław Urbańczyk

Stanisław Urbańczyk (1909–2001) was a Polish linguist and academic, a professor at the universities of Torun, Poznan and Cracow. He was the head of the Institute of the Polish Language at the Polish Academy of Sciences in 1973–79.[1]

Stanisław Urbańczyk was born in a peasant family of Kwaczała. He completed 4-class elementary school in Kwaczała and started learning in st. Anne's Secondary School (today I Liceum Ogólnokształcące im. Bartłomieja Nowodworskiego w Krakowie). In the years 1929-1934 he studied Polish and Slavic philology[2] at the Jagiellonian University. In 1937 he became an academic teacher. Among his students was young Karol Wojtyła, later the pope John Paul II. In 1939 he was arrested by the Nazis during Sonderaktion Krakau and imprisoned in concentration camps in Sachsenhausen and Dachau.[3]

He is the author of many books, articles and reviews. Among his scholarly interests were synchronical and diachronical Polish grammar, dialectology, history of language, Slavic religion and mythology, biblical translation and infuence of Czech unto Polish in Middle Ages.

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