- male, deceased (1923)
- Vatroslav Jagić, was a Croatian language researcher and a famous expert in the area of Slavic languages (Slavistics) in the second half of the 1...
- male, deceased (1939)
- Aleksander Brückner was a Polish scholar of Slavic languages and literatures (Slavistics), philologist, lexicographer and historian of literature. H...
- male, deceased (1937)
- Lyubomir Miletich (14 January 1863-1 June 1937) was a leading Bulgarian linguist, ethnographer, dialectologist and historian, as well as the...
- male, deceased (1995)
- Jaroslav Bohdan Rudnyckyj OC (1910 - October 19, 1995) was a Ukrainian-Canadian linguist, lexicographer with a specialty in etymology and...
- male, deceased (1861)
- Pavel Jozef Šafárik ("Safáry" / "Schaffáry"/ "Schafary"/ "Saf(f)arik" / "Šafarík"/ "Szafarzik", Czech Pavel Josef Šafařík, modern Slovak "Pavol Jo...
- male
- Mykhaylo O. Maksymovych(1804-1873), also spelled Mykhailo Maksymovych, was a famous Ukrainian naturalist, historian, and writer. He contributed to...
- male, deceased (1906)
- Professor Marin Stoyanov Drinov (1838-13 March 1906) was a Bulgarian historian and philologist from the National Revival period who lived and...
- male, deceased (1942)
- Norbert Jokl was an Austrian albanologist of Jewish descent who has been called the father of albanology. Jokl was born in Bzenec (then Bisenz),...
- male
- Michael Kandel is an American translator and author of science fiction. He received a doctorate in Slavistics from Indiana University, and is an...
- male
- Milan Rešetar (Serbian cyrillic: "Милан Решетар", February 1 1860, Dubrovnik - January 14 1942, Florence) was a Serbian slavist, linguist, Rag...
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