Claus Killing-Günkel

Killing-Günkel holding a lecture during a GIL meeting in 2010 (in the background: a sample text of his constructed language Cliiuy)

Claus Killing-Günkel (born Günkel; 9 October 1963), in Esperanto also known as Nikolao Günkel, is a German teacher and interlinguist.

Life

Claus J. Killing-Günkel was born Claus J. Günkel in Eschweiler, a city in western Rhineland, where he grew up, attended Städtisches Gymnasium Eschweiler and lived from 1963 to 1989 and from 1999 to 2009. From 1982 to 1992, he studied mathematics, computer science and French at the RWTH Aachen University and the University of Paderborn. At the latter, in 1993 and 1994, he was a lecturer in the Department of Education. Since 1997 he works as a berufskolleg teacher.

He is also a city guide[1] and until 2012 he was a member of the board of Eschweiler Geschichtsverein (EGV) (i.e. Eschweiler Historical Society)[2] and of the Fördererverein Nothberger Burg (i.e. Nothberg Castle Sponsors' Society). He has two children and currently lives in Cologne; since 2010 he is called Killing-Günkel.[3]

In 1981, Killing-Günkel learned the constructed language Esperanto. In the Esperanto movement, he has managed publications, organized international meetings, founded an Esperanto youth group in Eschweiler and taught that language inter alia at the adult high school of Düren.

He is an Esperantolog, member of Gesellschaft für Interlinguistik (GIL) (Society for Interlinguistics) and of the scientists' staff of Akademio Internacia de la Sciencoj San Marino (AIS) as well as lector for mathematics of the international Scienca Revuo. In the 1980s and 1990s, he wrote articles for Kontakto, Monato and La Gazeto.

His field of activity within Esperanto Studies includes lexicography, etymology, Esperanto offshoots (called Esperantidos) and language propaedeutics within the scope of cybernetic pedagogy. First classifications of Esperantidos are made by him. Furthermore, he deals with Volapük, Interlingue, Interlingua, Glosa and Ido and edited an Esperantido magazine called Nova Provo (i.e. New Attempt) in the 1990s.[4] He has contributed to various reference books and tools of Esperanto, including the Plena Ilustrita Vortaro de Esperanto of 2002.

See also

Fonts

Esperantological publications
Publications on linguistic cybernetics
Poetry and fiction
Lectures (excerpt)

References

  1. Program 2005 of the EGV Archived 2006-05-19 at the Wayback Machine. (PDF; 101 kB) from 9 October 2010
  2. Newsletter of the EGV 2011 from 9 August 2013
  3. AK des Eschweiler Geschichtvereins Archived 2013-08-26 at the Wayback Machine. from 9 October 2010
  4. GIL lecture on Esperantidos from 9 August 2013
  5. Bibliography of the Reta Vortaro from 9 August 2013
  6. Detlev Blanke: Plansprachliche Wörterbücher, vide 6.2.3 (p. 17) from 9 August 2013
  7. Summary from 9 August 2013
  8. Entry in Originalaj poemaroj en Esperanto from 9 August 2013
  9. Song no. 4 from 9 August 2013
  10. Review by Abel Montagut from 9 August 2013
  11. Review by Mariana Evlogieva from 9 August 2013
  12. Review by A. Giridhar Rao from 9 August 2013
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