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G. J. Ramstedt

 Language Learning Forum : Polyglots Post Reply
bela_lugosi
Hexaglot
Senior Member
Finland
Joined 6280 days ago

272 posts - 376 votes 
Speaks: English, Finnish*, Italian, Spanish, German, Swedish
Studies: Russian, Estonian, Sámi, Latin

 
 Message 1 of 1
11 November 2007 at 4:10am | IP Logged 
from WIKIPEDIA:

Gustaf John Ramstedt born in Ekenäs / Tammisaari October 22, 1873, died in Helsinki November 25, 1950, was a Finland-Swedish linguist and diplomat. As an undergraduate, he attended the University of Helsinki, where he studied Finno-Ugric languages under Eemil Nestor Setälä. He was later attracted to the study of Altaic languages and went to Mongolia to study the Mongolian language at the suggestion of Otto Donner. He later became professor extraordinarius in Altaic languages at the same university.

During his expeditions in Mongolia Ramstedt become a personal fried to highly educated Buryat Mongol (Burjaatti Mongoli) Agvan Dordzhi who acted as full representantive of 13th Dalai Lama, Thubten Gyatso and was a full member in Tibetan Government, Kashag as Minister of Treasures (Finances). Ramstedt was one of the few foreigners who was invited to visit Lhasa, but unfortunately the coming events prevented his visit to Tibet. In 1911 the Mongol delegation in St.Petersburg asked Ramstedt to act as mediator with Imperial Russian Government to support the Mongolian Independence from Chinese Empire. He managed to confirm the Russians of the good will of Mongolian representantives and they supplied 15.000 modern rifles to the Mongolians to start the uprising against the Chinese rule in Mongolia.

In 1912, when Ramstedt was in Urga, Mongolia, the Mongol leaders; Da-Lama, Handan Dordzhi, and Haisan-Gung asked him to help with the negotiations with the Russian representantives which did not accept the Mongol idea to unify Urjanhai, Mongolia (including also Inner Mongolia) and Buryat Mongolia to one modern Mongol State. Ramstedt advised the Mongol leaders to seek also international recognition for their state from other states, particularly Japan, Britain, Germany, France and United States. Ramstedt did not know anything of the secret agreement between Russia and Japan where Inner Mongolia was promised by both States to be kept as a part of China.

Following the independence of Finland in 1917, he became Finland's first envoy to Japan, as a Chargé d'affaires, from 1920 to 1929, during which he was a frequent guest lecturer at Tokyo Imperial University, where he influenced Kunio Yanagita, Izuru Shimura, Kyosuke Kindaichi, and Shimpei Ogura. He acquired command of the Japanese language remarkably quickly. He also was chairman of the Finnish Esperanto Society.

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So, Ramstedt spoke at least Finnish, Swedish, Japanese, Mongolian and Esperanto. Probably Russian as well. :)


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