Konstantin Zhitomirsky

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Konstantin Zhitomirsky
Born(1863-01-13)January 13, 1863
Died(1918-12-19)December 19, 1918
Academic background
EducationOdessa University

Konstantin Zhitomirsky (born Israel Zhitomirsky) was a Jewish pedagogue and Yiddish scholar born in Ukraine, then part of the Russian Empire.

Publications[edit]

P. I. Kagan's Jewish Gymnasium in Vilnius where Zhitomirsky worked as a teacher in the 1910s

Zhitomirsky was a regular writer for the Saint Petersburg-based journal Courier of the Society for the promotion of enlightenment among the Jews of Russia. Between the years 1910 and 1912, he published a series of articles on the "Judeo-German dialect, its essence and significance" and “What Jews live with, issues in Jewish cultural history".[1]

He co-authored the Yiddish textbook Di naye shul ("The New School") with Dmitri Hochberg. It was published in Vilnius, Lithuania in 1913. He also published a supplement to the book called Di vizuel-fonetishe metode tsu lernen leyenen af yidish ("The visual-phonetic method of learning to read in Yiddish") and intended for use by teachers working with illiterate Yiddish-speaking children. Another supplement to the book entitled Bamerkung un metodishe onvayzungen tsu der "nayer shul" ("Observation and methodical instructions for the "New school") was published in 1918 in Kyiv after he was evacuated to Ukraine during the First World War.[2]

Family[edit]

Konstantin Zhitomirsky was married to Zinaida Vikteshmayer from Taganrog. He was father to the Soviet-Tajikistani epidemiologist Viktor Zhitomirsky and grandfather to the Polish poet Eugeniusz Żytomirski.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Konstantin Zhitomirsky". Yiddish Leksikon. 2016-09-11. Retrieved 2023-07-05.
  2. ^ "Metodishe onvayzungen tsu lernen leyenen Yidish: tsum lern-bukh "Di naye shul"". Wypożyczalnia Academica (in Yiddish). Retrieved 2023-07-05.
  3. ^ Файн, Виктор; Вершинин, Сергей (2013). Таганрогские Сабсовичи и их потомки. Опыт генеалогического исследования (in Russian). Москва: Триумф.