Milan Rešetar
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Milan Rešetar (February 1, 1860, Dubrovnik – January 14, 1942, Florence) was Croatian and Serbian slavist, linguist and historian.
After the gimnasium in Dubrovnik, he attained studies of classic Philology and Slavistics in Vienna. He worked as a high-school professor in Koper, Zadar and Split, and later a professor of Slavistics on universities of Vienna and Zagreb). He also edited the Croatian edition of "List dravnih zakona" magazine. After retirement, he moved to Florence where he died 1942.
The main areas of his works included dialectology and accentology of South Slavic languages , as well as philologically impeccable editions of older, 15th to 18th century Croatian writers for the Croatian (Formerly, Yugoslav) Academy of Sciences edition "Stari pisci hrvatski"/old Croatian writers. He was one of founders of South-Slavic dialectics, investigating features of Shtokavian (Der Štokawische Dialect, Vienna, 1907) and Chakavian dialects, and also wrote a monography about Molise Croatian dialect. He was also engaged in the field of numismatics (Dubrovačka numizmatika, 1924-1925), inheriting the interest and coin collection from his father Pavle.
His most important works include "Čakavština i njene nekadašnje i sadašnje granice" (Chakavian Dialect, its Past and Present Boundaries), "Štokavski dijalekat" (Shtokavian Dialect), "Najstariji dubrovački govor" (Oldest Dialects of Dubrovnik), "Najstarija dubrovačka proza" (Oldest Literature of Dubrovnik). His works in this area are, with a few exceptions, superseded by later areal linguistics and historical dialectology research. On the other hand, Rešetar's editions of the Renaissance and Baroque poets and playwrights are still the standard printed issues-only modern computerized textology analyses, done in the Institute for Croatian language and linguistics, have begun to question some aspects of his transliteration choices on the graphemics level. Still, the main body of his work in this area remains highly regarded and confirmed by contemporary textology.